【What is "elegance" made of】
Let's moderately break down the overall impression of elegance, not just price or stitches.
Elegance is a convenient word.
Although used as a compliment, its definition is vague, and it generally lands on "something good."
But that "something good" is not just air; it is made up of the sum of several elements.
Here, without being too definitive, I will break down the elements that create elegance, somewhat scientifically, somewhat stylishly, in a moderate way.
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The true nature of elegance is "lack of information congestion"
Clothing that looks elegant tends to be less visually busy.
Rather than having few elements, the main feature is properly decided, and others do not intrude.
・Elements that tend to congest information
・Colors are many
・Patterns are strong
・Materials stand out (strong gloss, long pile, etc.)
・Hardware is stabbing the eye
・The logo becomes the subject
・Layers are many and the center of gravity disperses
Organize to look elegant,Decide on only one main feature.
The rest is quietly brought together with similar colors or textures,Standout elements are placed as points rather than surfaces, etc...
In short, elegance can be seen more as an act of organization rather than subtraction.
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The most effective thing is "the contours look settled"
More than being thin or thick, it's about whether the contours are settled.
This difference surprisingly influences the impression.
When the contours are hard to settle
The shoulders shift, lowering the center of gravity of the upper body
Tension causes wrinkles to gather at a single point
The sleeves and hems flutter, scattering the gaze
The length is half-hearted, and the proportions are hurried
When the contours tend to settle
The position of the shoulders and body is natural, and wrinkles are dispersed
The length does not clash with body proportions
The material has just a little firmness and weight, maintaining its shape
Elegance is more about the appearance of stable lines than making a style statement.
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3 "Feeling good when moving" clothes are elegant
Elegance cannot be decided by still images alone.
Walking, sitting, reaching out. When your clothes settle well during these everyday movements, your impression instantly becomes more polished.
Elements that make it easy to look neat during movement
The fabric has a moderate weight (too light, and it tends to bounce)
The finishing of the hem and cuffs is good, and they are less likely to flip up
With jackets, the structure of the shoulders and chest is less likely to collapse
With pants, wrinkles tend not to gather at a single point
If the clothes don't react excessively to this, even your movements look more refined. That's a bit of an advantage.
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The sense of how it shines really reflects personality
Whether it looks elegant or not shows in how the light is handled.
It's not about whether it has gloss or not, but how it shines.
Gentle light that leans towards elegance
Strong shine on the surface without being too glossy.
Quietly shining with lines or dots.
Reflections do not dominate but support the shape.
Lighting that tends to be difficult.
The surface shine is strong.
The hardware is too mirror-like, drawing attention.
Strong reflection from materials, with light entering the eyes before the color.
Luster is not a villain. When done well, it actually adds sophistication.
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Color schemes are more about "harmony" than "number of colors."
Elegant color schemes are not necessarily dull.
There are people who can pull off even with many colors. The difference is how well the colors get along.
A relationship that tends to look elegant.
Create depth with shades of the same hue.
Accent colors should be small and only one point.
Arrange warm colors within warm colors, and cool colors within cool colors.
A relationship that tends to be difficult.
Placing strong colors side by side in the same area.
Clashing warm and cool colors, both asserting themselves.
The contrast is too strong with black, white, and primary colors.
It's more about arranging colors so they don't clash rather than reducing the number of colors.
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6 The distribution of hardness and softness creates sophistication
Elegant attire often has a good balance of textures.
If only hard things are used, it becomes too strong; if only soft things are used, the outline tends to become vague.
For example
Hardness of tailored and leather items
Softness of knitwear and shirts
Tighten with shoes, loosen with a scarf
Having both "tightening" and "loosening" elements makes the outfit suddenly look more mature.
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7 Elegance is understood when you get close
The overall impression from afar can be deceiving, but up close, it’s honest.
Elegance is more about "being well-maintained" than hygiene.
Areas that are easily noticeable
Pilling on knitwear
Friction on collars and cuffs
Clouded buttons
Dry leather
Worn-out shoes
There's no need to do everything perfectly. However, having some touches makes the whole look more polished.
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8 The very last is "How to assert oneself"
Elegant attire is quiet.
But quiet does not mean weak; it feels like passing without raising the tone.
Do not assert with a logo
Do not rely on decoration
Convey through shape and texture
Maintain a distance that only those who understand can grasp
Elegance lies in what is conveyed without showing off. It's a little sneaky.
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Summary
Elegance is the sum of being "well-arranged"
Information does not congest
Contours are calm
Does not collapse even when moving
Light and color do not clash
Hardness and softness coexist
Does not fall apart even when looked at closely
When elements face the same direction, a sense of "quality" that cannot be fully explained by price or stitches emerges.
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A dash of MOOD
Rather than aiming for elegance, reduce one contradiction in the outfit.
Just that can make the overall atmosphere smoothly settle.
More than flamboyance, harmony. More than novelty, calmness.
MOOD wants to leave that balance with a slightly more sophisticated word.