Wed Dec 15, 2021 3:53 am
Gentlemen, please don't misunderstand me. I do not advocate "skin tight" or "adhesive" shirts and would never wear them. Regardless of recent "fashion." Of course Windsor wore Scholte drape jackets—and they always fit beautifully, with high armholes, a nipped waist, and trim skirt. I have no objection to the shirt pictured, but it is noticeably fuller in the body and waist than Connery's in FRWL. Neither are outside the normal range for the time; Windsor's strikes me as at the full end of the "gentlemen's cut" as the RTW makers used to call it. Since he could have his shirts cut any way he wished, I was merely interested in whether that particular shirt of his was typical of what he wore over most of his sartorial life (the collar is superb, as noted). And in how that degree of fullness might have related to trends through the century, and to earlier ones.
Over a decade ago in this forum I remarked on the changing relations of shirt fullness and close-fittedness of waistcoats and jackets (or doublets, coats, or frock coats) through history. I actually find some fullness (more than the minimum needed for comfortable movement) preferable, My observation was met with skepticism, shall we say. But I've come not to prefer significant vertical folds of cloth over the chest from the shoulders, or considerable extra cloth at the waist, when worn under a jacket—especially in warm weather. Like Windsor, I more often wear belts or DAKS-tabbed waists than braces, so too much cloth at the scye or tucked into the waistband works against comfort, in my experience.
I was recently watching again the 1984 film Swann in Love from Proust's Du côté de chez Swann / "Un Amour de Swann". In an early scene, Jeremy Irons as Charles Swann is being dressed by his valet in a gorgeous, pristinely pressed, but voluminous white linen shirt which will be worn with a very fitted waistcoat and frock coat—no Scholte drape there. It's just interesting to imagine how that combination, or the even more voluminous/fitted pairings in the Regency or Monte Cristo eras, would have felt to wear.
I'm not here to pass judgment, just to appreciate variety and understand nuance.