This seems like an easy task. But it can be fraught with problems. Let’s start with the most basic guidelines. If you are wearing a leather belt, it should match your leather shoes, if you are wearing them. Black shoes should be paired with a black belt, brown with brown and tan with tan.
The shades need not match exactly, but they must be close. The brown may be a little paler or a little darker, but it should not be able to be described as tan.
The texture need not match exactly either. The belt can be crocodile, ostrich or brogued. Indeed, a belt that matches the shoes exactly (both black crocodile, for example) smacks of artifice. Somehow it suggests you are all crocodile skin underneath, and only these two bits are peaking out.
Suede belts and woven leather belts are naturally more casual, and that should be reflected in the suit or outfit they go with – linen suits, odd jackets, outfits without ties. But again, colours should be similar.
Brightly or unusually coloured belts can work well, particularly as one pop of colour on an otherwise plain outfit. However, the colour of the shoes and belt should always be different enough to be a real contrast.
Brown is not an effective contrast with black or tan. Try primaries – reds, yellows – with black shoes, as you would with socks. And more muted colours with brown – oranges, greens – again as you might with socks.
The belt should not be too wide or too narrow. The easiest way to gauge whether it is either of these is to compare it to the width of the belt loops it will go through. Jeans have wider loops and should have wider belts. They can also be heavier, to reflect the material. Worsted wools should have sleaker, slimmer belts. But again the width of the loops is your best guide.
The buckle should be obvious, at least with a suit. Slim, discrete and silver in colour (unless you wear much gold elsewhere). No logos.
Ribbon belts can work well, particularly with summer outfits (again, matching the weight of the belt to the weight of the material it ties together). Best not to combine them with every other preppy accessory, though.
Ties as belts may have been a favourite of Fred Astaire but they are hard to pull off with elegance. If he had started wearing neckties around his waist before he was universally considered stylish, I would bet a chunk of money that it would have seemed artificial.
Next week, the follow-up question: whether to wear a belt at all. You lucky things you.








4 Guest Comments »
ReplyDelete1.
Okay - here’s a question. I have silver buckles on my belts. Is it okay to wear a silver buckle with a blazer that has brass buttons???
Comment by 30 days — June 20, 2008 #
2.
30 days,
Interesting conundrum. I think that metallic items, as they have a tendency to attract the eye, should be matching or as near as damnit to matching. In my room I have a chest on which sit items of ’silver’ or chrome tone - I will not allow brass anywhere near it because it seems to me one of those mixtures that looks ‘wrong’. A brass buckled belt would be better with your jacket. Then again, other writers and readers may disagree with such restriction and might encourage the silver buckle.
Comment by Winston Chesterfield — June 20, 2008 #
3.
I have a bit of a query. What kind of belt would one wear (if any, that is…) with sneakers, particularly if they’re white.
I’m with Winston when it comes to metallic items - I usually go like with like. Not doing so seems plain wrong, at least in my eyes.
Comment by Roderick Mallia — June 21, 2008 #
4.
Hi all - I agree with Winston on the metallic nature of buttons and buckles etc.
Roderick, I think white trainers free you up to wear almost any type of belt. I would avoid anything too formal, smart and clean (the kind of belts I was advocating above) but anything else could work, in any colour - look to the rest of your outfit for a match or harmony.
Comment by Simon Crompton — June 22, 2008 #
Guest comments contd:
ReplyDelete#
Thank you Simon. I usually give colourful, non-leather belts a go, normally choosing a colour that is present in the detailing of the trainer. But somehow, the white trainers seem to be ‘detached’ from the rest of the outfit. I find that I can’t quite pull it off well.
Comment by Roderick Mallia — June 22, 2008 #
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[…] case you didn’t know this rule or want to learn more about how to wear a belt check out what Men’s Flair has to […]
Pingback by How to Choose the Right Belt…Just in Case You Didn’t Know at invisible blog — June 25, 2008 #
I have a question about my suit for a wedding I am going to on January 3rd...
ReplyDeleteI have a black, slim cut 3 button suit and a tan organgeish belt/shoes combiniation. I feel like it makes me pop a little bit and is similar to how people dressed when I lived in Italy. My parents think that it looks tacky and that I should go with all black. They say that all the websites they read tell them I would look like an informal mess.
I just think they don't get young/European styles. What is your take on it?
Skynelmondo,
ReplyDeleteI'm afraid I have to agree with your parents on this one. While the combination may be a funky one, it is not the sort of thing best suited to a wedding. A cocktail evening, perhaps, or other party at night, but not a wedding.
Generally on the wedding outfit, if it is during the day I would also recommend a paler suit if possible. Black is hard not to look funereal during the day.
You never know, that paler suit might go more harmoniously with your orange (tan?) shoes as well.
Simon