Friday, November 27, 2009

GLOSSY MEN:


JOSEPH GORDON-LEVITT on GQ December 2009


500 Days of Summer made a big(ger) star out of Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and he's very interesting.
For GQ's December 2009 issue, Gordon-Levitt pulls off this year's best retailers/designers with lots of humor and oddly cool poses. You could imagine him singing or dancing for these photos like he did on the music video he shot with co-star Zoey Deschannel for She & Him's "Why Do You Let Me Stay Here?"...
As for the clothes, well surprisingly, they're not that expensive.
Check out GQ's picks for this year's best designers and more of Gordon-Levitt's photos on the December issue of GQ.

source: GQ

-Gerard
ON THE NEWSSTANDS:


ROBERT DOWNEY JR. on ESQUIRE DECEMBER 2009
I have not much to say...but I HAVE to say that I incredibly admire Robert Downey Jr. He's one of the few male actors I consider "cool". He also upped the cool factor with his latest role...Playing Sherlock Holmes is no joke. And putting Jude Law as a sidekick made him all the more interesting. PLUS, those shoes are killing me...They're oh-so HANDSOME!

source: Esquire

-Gerard

Tuesday, November 24, 2009


ON THE NEWSSTANDS:


JOHN MAYER for DETAILS DECEMBER 2009


Steven Daly---the writer of the article, wrote that it was unusual for a musician to arrive early for an interview and Mayer did.
In John Mayer's case, he "prides himself for being an 'unusualist'". And in my case, I pride myself for being born on the same day Mayer was...October 16.

Anyway, I've read this tiny portion from his interview and it seems like---first impressions don't really last, he's really some kind of a douchebag. He says something about his talent of looking at things and knowing exactly how long it'd take him to learn whatever it is he's been watching. He also says that you wouldn't want him to be "picking a hobby you have". For whatever reason, read more about Mayer's slightly irritating---yet intriguing, knowledge of self and all about his fourth solo album from December 2009's DETAILS issue.
source: DETAILS
-Gerard

Friday, November 20, 2009

CAMPAIGN MAN:
SEAN O'PRY for H&M KNITS
The great Sean O'Pry lends his wonderful face to H&M's winter collection of knitwear.
And I always find O'Pry's projects amazing. He truly is one hell of a model. If I had to change my face, I'd pick Sean O'Pry's over Garrett Neff's or David Gandy's and his look-alike Cory Bond's. I would always choose his face over everybody else's...
But when it comes to the body...well, that's a different story.
But O'Pry really is a stunning young man. And to think he's just my age....Imagine what he'd look like when he's 40! I hope he still is the same.
For some reason I picture him in a 20s movie...I don't know why.
-Gerard

Wednesday, November 18, 2009


CUTTING the EDGE:


The Death of the Boat shoes

Nobody really would kill the boat shoes, but it's how Gerard Gotladera sees it. CUTTING the EDGE goes highly-opinionated on what really separates the boys from the men, why finding one's style is mandatory and finally why the boat shoes are Resting In Peace...

By now, readers of this blog of mine would be accustomed to my Nazi-way of viewing fashion and style and for this month, my CUTTING the EDGE post would be of no different tone. For November I have published on webspace one of my biggest frustrations on the style department: Why the hell is everybody wearing boat shoes these days? Is everybody suddenly closet preppy kids?

In school---the University of Asia & the Pacific, only a few of us had sported boat shoes to class. Now I'm not saying I'm one of these men who started the "trend", but during those times, there were only so little of us that you could count us using your fingers on one hand. Of course, you would draw stares and comments, because at this age and in this country, the norms of ordinary male fashion footwear would be STRICTLY Converse sneakers. Every guy in Manila owns a pair (I used to), because Converse sneakers truly fits everybody: anybody can wear it. Or the other option would be to go about wearing Nike high tops or dunks or whatever you call them. So wearing boat shoes was like seeing a dog run on two legs at a marathon: interesting and somehow strange. As I continued living my life inside my boat shoes---there came a time when I practically wore no other shoes outside, I noticed that a lot of my schoolmates were starting to sport them. A month or two into the year, there were more who caught on the craze.


On some cheap series on some channel accesible to both cable and non-cable TV, I saw this dude wearing boat shoes on air and I was nodding my head in dismay. There was nothing wrong with the boat shoes for they looked really good: an ice cream green tea color done up in suede with cream detailing (I know, oh-so-cool). What was wrong though was the person wearing it. Technically, I wouldn't be a good judge of his character because I don't know the guy. On TV he wasn't funny. Surely, he gets paid quite handsomely for being casted on some boring comedy show because it's TV. But what's really oh so annoying was the fact that the way he conducted himself on TV and the blonde streaks he sported on his brown Filipino hair ruined the prestige of his handsome shoes. Again, I do not know this man and wouldn't want to, but it still does offend me to know that he wears the same shoes as I do.


Some sneaker magazine I once flipped through at a bookstore showed a picture of a fairly mutated boat shoe that pretty much looked like some new sneaker design, was unconsciously shoving it in my face that the boat shoes I was wearing and had loved so much were for losers and fathers who knew nothing about style. I regretted the day I even laid eyes on that magazine. The point is, the whole message I am trying to convey is that the reason why men are men is because men are more understanding of true style and what the fashions of time present and stand for. The number one rule on any fashion disciple and taste maker's list is that nobody should be slaves of trends. And this rule comes from a real sense and deeper knowledge of how style and fashion really works.

What all fashion disciples, taste makers and educated people know when it comes to fashion and style is that trends and fashions are mass produced like cans of Andy Warhol Campbell Soup: they're sold in grocery stores, come in a certain flavors and are up for grabs for anyone who has enough money to buy them. When you have the money, are intrigued by the soup and the nutrition and taste it'll give, then you buy a can. Fashion is just like that: this season, Stefano Pilati of Yves Saint Laurent wants men to wear deep, revealing V-neck shirts and blazers that are cut short up front and end long at the back, next season it's a whole new thing. If a financially able man sits front row at Pilati's fashion show and has no real knowledge of true style the tendency is for this man to keep buying from the collection without even knowing if it'll last in his closet and if he'll actually wear them for more than once. Actually, scratch that, it's a boy...not a man. People who are aware of trends, see them on magazines and online are always susceptible to buying every little thing that matters for that season. So it's a new pair of shoes for this season---because boat shoes are in, and it's another pair of shoes for Fall---because boat shoes are out. However men, who are sure of their own style, know what fashion stands for and has a great knowledge of whether or not things fit and suit him, would probably think twice before sporting a pair of boat shoes. It's what style is all about and what this blog is all about: it's about knowing one's own style and being smarter when it comes to fashion. That's why I'm separating the boys from the men, because seriously, there are so many boys I have seen and known.

I stand by having such a dictatorial manner of saying things just because I know my point and I know my case. The case is, the boat shoes have died. After seeing that dude on TV and after reading this sneaker magazine (published locally) point fingers at a Sebago pair of boat shoes for being old and unfashionable, I pray for the dear souls of all the handsome, authentic, not mutated pairs of boat shoes out there for peace in shoe heaven. Truly, only a few men understand the aesthetics behind the boat shoes. If this dude on TV had sported something else, something that would obviously match his style, then I wouldn't mind. If this sneaker magazine had not bashed on an icon of true boat shoe style, then I wouldn't really care. If men who knew that boat shoes would look great and better in simpler, classic fashion and style, then I really wouldn't burry the great American staple. All I want to voice out is that, not all things that are in look good on everybody. There is nothing wrong with trying or at least aspiring to wear something new because it's a free world and money makes it more liberated, but it only gets sour and more tragic when people abuse style and fashion. Don't wear boat shoes if you know you're not inclined to classic style. Don't sport Nike high-tops if you don't know how to wear them. Don't wear slim cut trousers when you know you're not fit to wear them. Don't buy a Rolex watch just because you have money. People should start owning up to things, and a shallow, yet fairly important start would be owning up to the things one wears: If you really see yourself rocking military boots and know that you would look great in them for more than a year or two, then by all means buy as much as your money could. If you really know that a pair of mutated boat shoes (boat shoe design meets sneakers) would look superb on you, then it's time to invest. Owning up to style means being able to carry it confidently and most of all, wearing it even after decades have past and knowing that for you, it'll never go out of style.

To that dude on TV and that sneaker magazine, I hope you all own up to whatever you are wearing. Because if both of you don't, then you boys should probably go back to prep school and learn some ABCs...


illustration Flickr

Saturday, November 14, 2009

GLOSSY MEN:
Garrett Neff, Cory Bond, Nate Gill, Tanner Tillung & Grayson Gettys on VMAN


Never mind the bulges and the greasy bodies... And never mind if it strikes you somewhat gay. By now, I might have trained your eyes to Garrett Neff (one of my favorite models of all time) so you know who he is among these greased up models. It's all about getting pumped up and worked out as Terry Richardson---one of the best photographers in my opinion, shoots these young strapping men in very little clothes. Richardson is always all about the white walls, the sex and the subtle, subtle humor and I love it! Save for those bare bodies, these pieces are actually quite handsome...Take great note of all those shoes. They're all oh-so-cool. Especially that most of them are in white...

source: models.com

-Gerard

Tuesday, November 3, 2009



GET EDGE:


PLATINUM ELLIPSE REF. 5738P by PATEK PHILIPPE

On my dream list of watches to buy and invest on would be a Cartier and a Patek Philippe.
I'm no master when it comes to knowing all the names of their models, but what I do know is that this platinum ellipse ref. 5738p (damn these watches have so much names) by Patek Philippe is by far, one of the sleekest most handsome watches I have ever seen on a magazine (American Esquire, November 2009 to be exact). On the website of Patek Philippe it says that these models had been crafted from the 60s to the 80s and that this version has a larger format. And of course, a platinum case. The dial is made of different sorts of 18k gold and the case is made up of---not only platinum, sapphire-crystal glass and a satin finished back. It's 30 meters water resistant and the strap's navy alligator skin. A watch this good and legendary comes with a fitting price of $44,900 (in Philippine peso it would cost you a damn good car). Oh, to have all the money in the world.... And to go scuba-diving wearing this baby.




-Gerard

Monday, November 2, 2009

ON THE NEWSSTANDS:

ROBERT PATTINSON on VANITY FAIR DECEMBER 2009



Robert "Edward" Pattinson covers for VANITY FAIR's December 2009 issue.
Surely, the women--girls I mean, would be swooning for such an early holiday treat. The vampire tells his side of the story on the issue about his relationship with Kristen Stewart and why the hell where Hollywood big wigs had doubts about the Robert Pattinson to play--probably his only, lead character Edward on the monstrous Twilight saga. And if you visit the VANITY FAIR's website, they're offering so much pictures of the celebrity: from the first slide of a four part slide outtake photoshoot with Bruce Weber to photos that would exclusively appear on print. This is some seriously crazy vampire bite everybody's suffering from. But I have to admit, he really would make one good model.

source: Vanity Fair


-Gerard
GET EDGE & WEAR NOW:
THE PALLADIUM BOOT

I had been longing to sport boots for quite some time now. I mentioned my desire to wear it to a friend and he felt a little doubtful about it, for I never seem like the boot kind.

I also have another friend (Bryle Penamante) who understands my liking of it. Boots have that appeal and sends out a subtle statement of rebellion. And to me that's very attractive. The ones I have in mind are the round-toe, rugged kind that would either come in leather or canvas and would never reach the shins. One of these days, I will wheel (and will) myself to head off to some army store to get my own pair of canvas boots, especially now when suddenly EVERYBODY wears boat shoes and discovered that loafers are actually manly, not gay (suckers came sooo late). And for people like me who think boots are actually cool instead of trying-hard, The Palladium Boots are pairs that fit the best qualities of trusty, stylish, timeless footwear. For a price range that fits a healthy budget ($55-85) these lightweight and cool pairs are worthy of some heavy wearing. Of course, these ones would be best when the colder climate embraces Manila, and they'd also be smart footwear for rainy seasons, but to me, I'd wear them to bed (I'm kidding). If I could own a pair, I'd wear them to pieces. DAMN ARE THESE SHOES HANDSOME!

P.S. To my friend Bryle, I think we found the PERFECT pairs.

source: GQ


-Gerard