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Do Real Men Wear Halloween Costumes?

Halloween always raises a tough question for men of style: How, exactly, do you dress for a holiday that is all about the clothes you're wearing without looking like you're trying too hard (which you probably don't want to be doing) and without looking stupid (which you probably will anyway). That's what we asked two young men who prefer natty suits, throwback details, and nice shoes for this week's Blogger Showdown. Justin Bridges, of Tucked Style, isn't much of a costume guy himself but still thinks men should dress up for the occasion. Whereas Austin Wong, from Why You Mad, already believes he puts enough effort into his clothing daily, so Halloween should be no exception. Below, the two men debate who has the better strategy for pulling something together this weekend, plus offer some practical suggestions for costumes that are both sophisticated and simple. Well, if you want to practice ruining your favorite suit. Discuss. —Kurt Soller


Best Advise: Mind the Beard Line



The line between lumberjack and high schooler's first beard lies somewhere near your Adam's apple. Some tips on where to mark your beard line.


(a) Too short. 

(b) Just right.

(c) Way too long. 

Many years ago, growing a beard was easy. You just stopped shaving. Where your beard ended -- chin, neck, or somewhere after your chest hair began -- was nobody's concern, least of all yours. Now things are different. People tend to have jobs and fewer diseases, and beards require more tailoring. It helps to think of your face as a map, your beard an invading army. If you don't control the front line, there's really no reason to stay in the fight. Stopped too close to the jawbone (line a), a beard makes you look uptight. Like it's more the result of an appliqué than testosterone. Left to wander down your neck (line c), however, a beard invites comparisons to feral creatures or iconic communist firebrands. (If you have a job that involves neither timber nor rousing the proletariat, this is not a good thing.) The safest bet is the one-inch band just above your Adam's apple (line b). Here you manage to have both a legitimate beard and something of a neck. You have just as good a grip on machismo and gravitas as you do on an employable future.