The Journal — Dress Codes

A wedding formalwear for the Vestium NY journal article ‘What to Wear to a Black Tie Wedding: The Complete Guide for Women’.

What to Wear to a Black Tie Wedding: The Complete Guide for Women

Black tie gives women enormous latitude — and that latitude is where most of the confusion lives. Unlike men, who are working with a clearly defined uniform, women face a category that includes floor-length gowns, tailored pantsuits, jumpsuits, and a dozen interpretations between. The question isn't what's technically allowed. It's what the occasion demands, what the venue suggests, and what will look right in photographs that exist for the rest of your life.

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A black tuxedo detail for the Vestium NY journal article ‘The Tuxedo Guide: One-Button, Two-Button, Shawl Lapel, Peak Lapel — What's Right for You’.

The Tuxedo Guide: One-Button, Two-Button, Shawl Lapel, Peak Lapel — What's Right for You

A tuxedo is the most specific garment in men's fashion. The variables are narrower than in a business suit, the traditions are more clearly defined, and the consequence of getting it wrong is more visible — because everyone else in the room is wearing the same thing. This guide covers the meaningful decisions: lapel style, button configuration, fabric, and what each choice says about the man wearing it.

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A tailored professional portrait for the Vestium NY journal article ‘The Power Suit in 2026: What It Looks Like Now and Why It Still Works’.

The Power Suit in 2026: What It Looks Like Now and Why It Still Works

The power suit has been declared dead roughly once per decade since the 1980s. It is not dead. It has simply matured. The power suit of 2026 is not the oversized padded-shoulder garment of the Reagan era, nor the slim-cut minimalism of the early 2010s. It is something more specific and more confident than either: a suit made for the person wearing it, in fabric worth the investment, cut to convey authority without requiring announcement.

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A executive entering boardroom for the Vestium NY journal article ‘How to Dress for a Board Meeting When You Want to Command the Room’.

How to Dress for a Board Meeting When You Want to Command the Room

A board meeting is one of the few business occasions where what you wear is both taken seriously and specifically read. Board members are experienced evaluators of people and signals. The person presenting to a board who has dressed deliberately — who has chosen their suit, their shirt, their accessories with the understanding that the room is paying attention — communicates something different from the person who has dressed generically or carelessly.

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