![]() ![]() He can break these pieces apart and wear them with other things. “It’s just as stately as a blazer, but a lot more comfortable. “I chose a suede suit jacket,” Boston says. PAUL’S NEW LOOK: “You shouldn’t take a man to a place he doesn’t feel comfortable,” warns Boston, who put Paul in a city-friendly outfit that wasn’t so trendy that it made him look like an East Village fashion victim.īoston chose chocolate brown trousers, a turtleneck sweater, an olive suede jacket and JP Tods loafers, worn without socks for casual appeal. “I think he could pull off a style that’s a little hipper.” “My dad always looks very smart, but he doesn’t have a city flair,” says Chantal. ![]() But this holiday season, the Poiriers have a social calendar jam-packed with parties in New York. ![]() THE WOMAN: daughter Chantal Poirier, 25, publicistįASHION GOAL: to find a modern look for Paul to wear to holiday partiesĬhantal thinks her father’s New England prep style is perfect for his life in Connecticut. THE MAN: Paul Poirier, 63, a contractor in the Hartford, Conn., area Last week, The Post set Boston loose in the men’s department at Saks Fifth Avenue with a challenge: Choose holiday outfits for three different men with three very different engagements to attend. ![]() Just ask fashion stylist Lloyd Boston, author of the new book “Make Over Your Man: The Woman’s Guide to Dressing Any Man in Her Life” (Broadway Books, $29.95).īoston, who also works as a TV commentator for “Today” and the Style Network, wrote the book to guide women as they attempt to overhaul their guys’ looks. ![]()
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