Dress Code
From Tokyo to Shanghai to Hong Kong to Bombay
to Paris to
design suit through out the world.
Fashion changes frequently.
Old fashion reappears over and again.
Barak Obama and Ho Jintao wear top best suits.
A sneak peak into Chinese Luxury men’s clothier
that sells suits to world dignitaries reveals that fashion
may
change but their wardrobe’s power signals rank.
In Equator zone, the salaried man sheds his jacket and the
tie.
It is hard to sell suits in a country where it is believed
that one who is
wearing a suit is a businessman, and one without is a nobody.
Dress-code changes from climate to climate.
In cold weather countries pinstripe suits are a fashion.
Much of the corporate world has left gold cuff-links home.
Starched shirt is the dress-code item with shining dark
suit.
In the White House formality starts at the top.
If the President does not wear a suit, his image is lost as incongruous
with the lavish décor of the oval office. Shining black shoes is a must.
Any man may be in good spirit when he is well-dressed.
Jimmy Carter’s cardigans did not inspire the desired image
in the
eyes of the public. Though a worthy man he ended up in one
term.
Rank is a beautifier, but with best clothes, he commands owe
and respect.
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