designer shorts
When, and How, to Wear Them
Are they too short? Too casual? Can I wear them to the office? How baggy is too baggy? And footwear: Socks? Sandals? Sneakers? “Shorts are the single most intimidating item that a guy can shop for,” says Michael Macko, until last week the men’s fashion director at Saks Fifth Avenue. A few guidelines will help.
On Fit: “Treat your shorts the way you treat your pants,” says Humberto Leon, owner of Opening Ceremony. “If you wear baggy pants, get baggy shorts.” If you prefer fitted, it follows, pick a trimmer style. Then again, try not to be seduced by the loose looks on the model-clerks at Abercrombie. “Those guys are muscular, with big, beefy legs,” says Macko. “But if you don’t have muscular legs, your legs look like two little toothpicks.”
On Length: “If you have any insecurities, go with a longer look, like just above the knee,” says Leon. Longer than that and you enter “Euro-cute Capri-pant” territory, says Macko. And beware of the other extreme: “Maybe an inch or two above the knee, tops.”
On Shirts: A dress shirt with rolled-up sleeves is fail-safe, says Leon. However, make sure the shirt is on the shorter side. “If you want to sit at a park, you want to be able to untuck your shirt.”
On Footwear: Dress shoes, traditional wingtips, desert shoes: all okay with a tailored pair (not so much with the baggy styles). “A black pair of desert boots with a thin cotton black sock could be kind of nice,” says Leon.
On Work Exceptions: If your company seems cool about it, venture on; if nobody else is doing it, don’t. Think of work shorts as you would work jeans: neat, tailored, and worn with a short or long-sleeved dress shirt.
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