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slightly different shade blue jacket/pants?

43K views 17 replies 13 participants last post by  Orsini  
#1 ·
Wanted to hear the expert opinion on wearing a blue blazer with blue pants in a slightly different shade. Don't want it to look like I am pretending to wear a suit, when they are obviously different color/material. Thoughts?
 
#6 ·
Tangent: can anyone point to the historical/logical basis for wanting contrasting colors for jacket/trousers, specifically? I.e., is the purpose to simply avoid the faux suit appearance, or is there a deeper aesthetic goal of the contrast? Personally, the two-shades-of-the-same-color look isn't appealing to me, but I can't be sure that its not simply a learned preference.
 
#7 · (Edited)
Tangent: can anyone point to the historical/logical basis for wanting contrasting colors for jacket/trousers, specifically? I.e., is the purpose to simply avoid the faux suit appearance, or is there a deeper aesthetic goal of the contrast? Personally, the two-shades-of-the-same-color look isn't appealing to me, but I can't be sure that its not simply a learned preference.
I think that to a degree it is a learned preference. Though I have no doubt the question could be dealt with on multiple levels, including the psychological. To me, it just looks more interesting, it's about aesthetic balance and rhythm. When we look at an ensemble, the eye finds it pleasing to move from item to item creating an aesthetic whole that contains that movement within it. Pleasing contrasts help create that.
 
#9 ·
I think that to a degree it is a learned preference. Though I have no doubt the question could be dealt with on multiple levels, including the psychological. To me, it just looks more interesting, it's about aesthetic balance and rhythm. When we look at an ensemble, the eye finds it pleasing to move from item to item creating an aesthetic whole that contains that movement within it. Pleasing contrasts help create that.
I suspect it is much less of a learned response and more of a basic biological response to color and contrast.

I think you can do dark navy blazer with light blue trousers or vice versa. But it needs to be high contrast to look good.
 
#10 ·
I think it's some kind of brain hard-wiring: contrast, okay; same color, okay; slight difference, no. Just like when someone with no knowledge of tailoring or interest in clothes sees someone in an ill-fiting suit. They know it's "wrong" without knowing why.

Plus, IMO, lighter blue slacks with a blazer looks a little "uniform-ish". Funny, I don't have that prejudice against browns.
 
#15 ·
I'll reserve my judgment until I see the real thing in real life. I've seen people wearing low contrast, similar color ensemble and I have no problem with it.

So keep an eye out for that kind of ensemble in the wild and take note what works and what doesn't. Of course this requires that you have somewhat a good taste.
 
#17 ·
Matt's example is braver than I am. I wouldn't wear the same color jacket/trousers at all (obviously I'm not talking about a suit.)
My example isn't so different from mid grey flannels with a blue blazer. In my case it's just that the mid grey trousers have a blue tint to them. I think it works without any concerns.

I think it's really easy to mix different browns together and different greys together when one has a pattern and there is some contrast in overall tones.