Fuller cuts, British countryside, and the return of 90s favorites. The week begins with a look made for the season’s first breath of cold air.
There’s a moment when it becomes clear that fall is here. I open the door and the different-over-night weather winks like a grandpa and asks me where my jacket is. Soon I remember how comfortable (and easy to style) layers are and it’s like Ralphie waking up and it’s Christmas season. This is Fall Getup Week.
This is the part of the year where clothes stop being things you tolerate and start being things you choose. Layering becomes possible, shoes with some heft return from their seasonal exile, and jackets finish outfits like Bond’s bow tie. There’s texture, there’s structure, there’s comfort, and for once it feels like the effort has a payoff.
This Year’s Style Creative Direction
If there’s a plot this fall, it revolves around proportion and lost favorites from do-not-wear lists of decades past. Pants with classic, fuller cuts, shirts that have room to layer, tuck, and drape, accessories once phased out. Imagine the British countryside aesthetic colliding with the ‘90s J.Crew catalog. The result: modern, fuller silhouettes catch up to the last decade’s grounding in refined minimalism.
These clothes make sense together, and not in a way that requires learning a new aesthetic. For many of us, it’s one we grew up with, now through our contemporary lens.
The jeans and pants drape, shirts offer room for a little lunch, and jackets manage to frame you without making you look like a wedding photo from 1992. Nothing is baggy, but it all feels a little less precious, everything looks like it belongs to an adult who knows where his keys are.
No one here is chasing the new for its own sake. As the fits across menswear have loosened, we’re invited to a reunion where lost favorites like pants labeled “classic fit,” chunkier-shaped footwear, braided belts, and yes, the prodigal son cargo pant are given a modern edit: shapes you’ve worn before, now with better company.
Sure, you might grumble that you’ve been there, done that, but isn’t that the point? The challenge is finding out how these old shapes fit the current version of you, who, let’s face it, knows a lot more about taste.