Bernhard Roetzel (born August 17, 1966, in Hannover) is a German author. He is known for writing Gentleman. A Timeless Guide to Fashion.
Gentleman. A Timeless Guide to Fashion was first published in German in 1999, by the publishing house Koenemann. The original version of the book has been translated into 19 languages. [1] [2] In 2009, a revised and partly updated edition was published by h. f. ullmann. The new edition has also been translated into several languages.
After the publication of Gentleman. A Timeless Guide to Fashion, Roetzel wrote several other books, which were published in German. In April 2012, his latest book Mode Guide fuer Maenner was published by h. f. ullmann, along with the English version, A Guy's Guide To Style. [3] [4]
Although Roetzel writes primarily about classic menswear, he collaborated with Claudia Piras and the photographer Rupert Tenison on the book British Tradition and Interiors. [5]
Roetzel has been quoted in German newspapers, such as Welt Online, [6] Der Tagesspiegel [7] and Manager Magazin Online, [8] with his opinions on men's fashion. He has appeared on German television several times since 2000 and has been guest in various radio shows all over his country. [9] Outside Germany, he contributes regularly to Alister & Paine Magazine, the Japanese men's fashion magazine Men's Precious and the magazine Bespoken, which is published by the Brussels-based cloth merchant and distributed to its worldwide customers.
Roetzel has spoken at fashion shop openings, sales meetings of menswear companies and conferences of style consultants in Germany, Austria, The Netherlands, Poland, Belgium, France, the UK, the Czech Republic, the US, and Switzerland. In 2000, he spoke at the Annual Lunch of the British Menswear Guild in London. [10]
Bernhard Roetzel is the second son of the German scientist Prof. Dr.-Ing. Wilfried Roetzel [11] and his wife Sigrid Roetzel. [12] His great-grandfather was the steel industrialist Christian Rötzel after whom the Christian-Rötzel-Allee in the German town of Breyell was named and the Christian-Rötzel-Kampfbahn. Roetzel lives in Berlin. [13]
Rolf Dieter Brinkmann was a German writer of poems, short stories, a novel, essays, letters, and diaries.
Cufflinks are items of jewelry that are used to secure the cuffs of dress shirts. Cufflinks can be manufactured from a variety of different materials, such as glass, stone, leather, metal, precious metal or combinations of these. Securing of the cufflinks is usually achieved via toggles or reverses based on the design of the front section, which can be folded into position. There are also variants with chains or a rigid, bent rear section. The front sections of the cufflinks can be decorated with gemstones, inlays, inset material or enamel and designed in two or three-dimensional forms.
Morning dress, also known as formal day dress, is the formal Western dress code for day attire, consisting chiefly of, for men, a morning coat, waistcoat, and formal trousers, and an appropriate gown for women. Men may also wear a popular variant where all parts are the same colour and material, often grey and usually called "morning suit" or "morning grey" to distinguish it; considered properly appropriate only to festive functions such as summer weddings and horse races, which consequently makes it slightly less formal. The correct hat would be a formal top hat, or if on less spacious audience settings optionally a collapsible equivalent opera hat.
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