by fancylad
Instructions
Bespoke or Off-the-Rack
First, decide how much money you're going to want to spend on your suit. If you have the means, I suggest a bespoke, or hand-crafted, custom-fit, suit. You'll spend anywhere between $750 to $3,000 if you go bespoke, but the suit will fit like a glove. It's going to look incredible, the material will be top-notch and you're going to look like a male model in it.
Of course, you can pick up an off-the-rack seersucker suit at any men's clothing shop, but you run the risk of inferior material put together with shabby craftsmanship.
Either way, just make sure it has classic light blue-and-white pinstripes and it's 100 percent cotton.
There's a lot of debate about what kind of footwear goes with the seersucker suit. Traditionally, it's a light-colored, buckskin lace-up with red-rubber soles or a similar-colored saddle shoe. That's perfect if you're going somewhere formal like an outdoor summer wedding or the Kentucky Derby, but what if you're just going to your manager's backyard barbecue or a beach side restaurant for a drinks with that new impressionable temp who finally succumbed to three weeks of you badgering her for a date?
I say go with a subtle, but matching sandals or flip-flops. As long as they're not multicolored or have a bunch of straps like those hippie-Teva things, a nice low-profile sandal is fine. By the way: No Birkenstocks under any circumstances.
If you're going to that aforementioned backyard barbecue or some fancy bar to throw back a few mint juleps, go with a nice white linen Oxford and don't worry about it being crisply pressed or tucked in--as long as it's clean, you'll be fine. I've also seen the seersucker work handsomely with a short-sleeved, navy blue Polo shirt--the younger guys should opt for this one.
Stay away from the T-shirt though--I've never seen anyone pull off the seersucker suit with a tee except Johnny Depp during the mid '90s, and you are not Johnny Depp.
A lot of people are going to bring up accessories when you mention you're going to wear a seersucker suit, but I like to go with the "less is more" approach. A thin belt (which better compliment your shoes), a white pocket square if you're brave and a straw hat if you're planning on rowing your girlfriend around the lake later in the day. These are perfectly acceptable, anything else is self-indulgent.
You can wear suspenders, but you're going to look like Andy Griffith in "Matlock." And while I'm on the topic of how to ruin a good seersucker suit, avoid the double-breasted version of this timeless classic at all times--even Matlock was smart enough to stay away from that look.Tips & Warnings
How to Wear a Seersucker Suit | Provided by eHow.com
