21 thoughts on “Why does the fabric wrinkle up at the kneecaps like that? How do I stop it?

    • Anonymous says:

      30’s is a rough decade for looks. You’ve just become a real adult with real responsibilities so you need to look the part, not only professionally but also because you might have kids and you overall can’t be dressing the way you were in your 20’s but you don’t know how yet and you still likely look kind of young. Do I grow my beard out? Do I start mostly/entirely wearing collared shirts of some kind? Can I still even wear sneakers? Do all of my clothes have to fit properly?
      On top of that your hair is gonna start to fade in these years if it hasn’t already and if you don’t have decent facial hair genetics, like most men honestly, then you’re kind of hecked into looking soi. Men in their 40’s turn it around because they have the actual experience.

        • Anonymous says:

          If you run the twink looks too long you risk being really hecking disappointed in your 30’s when the looks stops working, and there aren’t many options as a 30 year old man to look cute or feminine without looking goofy. You also risk meeting a good man who will be disappointed when you age out into twink-death. Sure, have fun while you can, but aging happens to everyone and you should be prepared mentally for when you wake up and look in the mirror to see some smile wrinkles.

          • Anonymous says:

            I’ve been lifting for several years now but I still hold on to the fact that if I lost all of my upper body muscle and worked at it I could get back into twink mode. That said I’m 26, I doubt I could make myself cute at 35. I’m glad I’m bisexual and not gay because I can dress in a way that works for attracting both sexes while not fearing the future.

            twinks dont look feminine

            Some do some don’t, but they typically don’t dress masculine is the point, and its harder to be taken seriously on a day to day basis dressing like a twink in your 30’s than it is in your 20’s.

    • Anonymous says:

      >Pants too tight
      >faggy tech fabric that do not drape properly

      30’s is a rough decade for looks. You’ve just become a real adult with real responsibilities so you need to look the part, not only professionally but also because you might have kids and you overall can’t be dressing the way you were in your 20’s but you don’t know how yet and you still likely look kind of young. Do I grow my beard out? Do I start mostly/entirely wearing collared shirts of some kind? Can I still even wear sneakers? Do all of my clothes have to fit properly?
      On top of that your hair is gonna start to fade in these years if it hasn’t already and if you don’t have decent facial hair genetics, like most men honestly, then you’re kind of hecked into looking soi. Men in their 40’s turn it around because they have the actual experience.

      It’s because they half-ass it and still try to dress like a teen from the 2010’s but with a more “grown up” look. Plus millennials are obsessed with everything being comfy and feeling like athleisure shit. Instead of just getting nice shoes or boots they get sneaker/dress cope shoes which are ugly as sin, or just wear black sneakers. Instead of getting some nice tailored wool pants they get those cringe slim-fit tech fabric trousers and throw on and untucked polo since I guess tucking in your shirt “is for old people”. It’s honestly much much easier to dress in a grown-up, adult manner and look good you just have to commit to the look. Plus I think a lot of 30-40 yr millennials are just NPC and don’t want to stand out around their coworkers/friends.

      • Anonymous says:

        Unironically looks better than OP, just remove the jacket, hat, gloves and shades and he’d absolutely mog both basedlennials in OP.

  1. Anonymous says:

    >Why does the fabric wrinkle up at the kneecaps
    When you sit down, the fabric stretches’ over the knees, cheap fabrics are not resilient and will not return to original shape. You get the dreaded "knee pouches" as demonstrated by the douchebag on the left in OPs photo. Strechy synthetic fabrics have the give to avoid that. Natural fabrics, not so much.
    As a young man, when I purchased my 1st bespoke suit (yes, I am old gay) I was instructed to pinch the crease in the slacks as I sat down to draw up enough slack to prevent the stretching from occurring. With practice, it’s virtually unnoticeable.
    You will notice that even the durable denim of the blue jeans is affected by this, but not as much as the cheap, skinny fit trash fast fashion of the guy on the left.
    Lesson of the day: buy quality and learn to care for your clothing.

  2. Anonymous says:

    That’s how it naturally drapes over your knee joint, you have your front hip muscles stretching it out to the front and no muscles on the front of your shin bones, just the calf muscles in the back of the leg. What you can do is make sure your pant legs are the right length, and try a roomier cut, straight cut or even bootcut for jeans.

  3. Anonymous says:

    A) Get wider fitting trousers
    B) Avoid slim/skinny trousers/jeans that are 100% cotton. Look for a 98%cotton, 2% elastane mixture

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *