During the Milan Fashion Week S/S14 shows, MR PORTER took to the streets to see how the most stylish Fashion Week attendees chose to accessorize their looks. Enjoy!
Film by Mr Chris Floyd Words by Mr Chris Elvidge, Senior Copywriter, MR PORTER Ask Mr Andrew Weitz to describe his style in three words, and you could be forgiven for thinking that you'd misheard him. But when the talent agent - who works with numerous high-profile actors - says corporate, he means it. "I'm known in the entertainment community for being an impeccable dresser," he says, and with no misplaced pride; a feature in a recent edition of The Hollywood Reporter, entitled "Secrets of Hollywood's Best-Dressed Male Agents", which opened with an anecdote of Mr Weitz dining at the Thompson Hotel in Beverly Hills, described him as looking "less like a talent agent and more like a GQ editor fresh off the front row at Paris Men's Fashion Week".
It's a look that he describes as "conservative with an edge" - and while it ticks the corporate box, paying duty to the old-school, suited-and-booted image of a Hollywood agent, it's certainly not everyone's idea of conservative. Not that that concerns Mr Weitz. "When someone makes fun of what I'm wearing, I feed off of it," he laughs. "Everyone's so scared. Don't be scared!"
To hear more from Mr Weitz about how he dresses, watch the video, below.
One of the first things that you notice about Mr Emun Elliott is his voice. The Scottish-born actor speaks in a warm Edinburgh drawl, all single malt and heather honey. It's the kind of voice that would induce grown men to switch car insurance providers without due consideration; one can only imagine the effect that it has on the opposite sex. Combined with his enviable good looks and affable nature, it gives the 29-year-old the air of a wandering minstrel, a roguish charm that I can't be the first to pick up on if his recent casting in the medieval fantasy drama Game of Thrones, as the handsome troubadour Marillion, is anything to go by.
From contemporary suede wingtips to old-school leather longtips - sturdy, stylish and with those pleasing perforations, few men would walk away from a pair of these timeless classics. Beginning life in the early 20th century simply as a practical way to traverse Scottish Highlands (those holes were once useful for expelling water), there is now a generous selection to choose from, making brogues a go-to shoe for almost any occasion. Whether it's refined Italian or classic British - pick a pair of our favourite styles, and step out in shoes that are built to last and get better with age.
Electric blue wingtips, velvet loafers, and the flyest sneakers in the game—Tommy Ton captured it all during the Fashion Weeks of 2012. Here, a lesson in choosing the right kicks for your rig: