Like any suit, light gray outfits should hang close to the
body without billowing. The suit should never be tight enough to pinch
or wrinkle at any point, but men want to avoid excess fabric that waves
or flaps when their body moves. Lighter colors can be particularly
susceptible to a "breezy" impression; a closer fit helps keep them
looking trim and flattering.
If you're on the go a lot, your
bespoke suit can be a virtual bat-belt,
holding papers, pens, phone, PDA, keys, cigarettes, wallet, and loose
cash all secure and readily accessible. Almost all sport coats have the
standard two inside pockets; many have additional ones for pens or
cash. A custom made coat can have whatever pocket configuration its
wearer desires, such as special pockets for a security badge,
pocket watch,
or cigar. Men have even had their jackets made with an iPod pocket,
complete with a port for the headphone wire. While some claim that
putting anything in a jacket's outside pockets throws its drape askew
and should be avoided, this can usually be remedied by load-balancing:
keys on the right, phone on the left, etc. The inside pockets can hold
significant weight without affecting how the fabric hangs, but whatever
you put in them will be right against your chest with the jacket
closed, so it's not the best place for a bulky key-chain.
The sport coat is a remarkably versatile garment. It is the working
man's suit and the thinking man's pullover. In this twenty-first
century, it guarantees its wearer a sharp, handsome look wherever he
goes.
Heavier suits in light gray are rarer, and almost always wool
flannel. Many are more casual versions of the "Man in the Gray Flannel
Suit" business classic -- dressed-down adaptations of traditional
mid-20th century menswear. They tend to feature soft, napped wool and
untapered "sack" jackets. Good quality wool flannel makes these
extremely comfortable garments, excellent for prolonged wear on a
weekend or evening out in the fall or a sunny winter day.
Light gray is strictly a single-breasted jacket color. The formality of a
double-breasted suit jacket or
three-piece suit would look silly in such a casual shade. Even a three-button or 3/2
style jacket may be pushing it -- two buttons, low down on the body, are
the best option for a light gray suit. The deep "V" shape and good
expanse of shirtfront emphasizes the relaxed nature of the garment. A
single-breasted, two-button jacket in a casual color like light gray can
be worn without a necktie without looking incomplete, something of a
rarity in matched suits.