Cuffing (regular fit) T-Shirt sleeves, legit or cringe?
Hello, the title pretty much says everything already. When wearing regular fitting T-shirts, I don't like when there is a gap between the inside of the sleeve and my arm, and sadly my arm isn't big enough yet to fill the sleeve. Would cuffing the sleeves be a legit work-around or cringe?
13 Replies
You mean like a pinroll? I think it would just make the tshirt sleeves look disproportionate to the rest of the shirt
well it depends on the original length of the sleeve no? Maybe I can show some example pics later
I more meant that it might look off having the sleeves that tight on a regular fit shirt
chunky cuffed sleeves on a boxy, cropped tee can look good but imo a bit cringe on regular/slim fits.
Cuffing tee sleeves is tricky, I prefer it on very big or boxy shirts kind of like carrion said
Otherwise you're not impacting the silhouette that much and it comes off as affected. Like you're going for a vaccine or something.
Also they tend to unroll like extremely quickly if you're wearing a cotton blank. I don't think this is the solution to your issue, but buying shirts with slimmer sleeves might be.
Hmm guess the solution is to hit the gym :keepincool:
or just buy shirts with smaller arm holes lmfao
Well smaller holes mean smaller size and that doesn’t always work, unless you know retailers that do bespoke t shirts?
nah, you can pretty easily find tees that specifically make armholes that hug your arms.
American Apparel used to do a shitload back in the day, but there are tons of brands that do it still
This would be the T shirt I wanted to wear cuffed, cuffed one side to show
Sal put it better than me imo - you aren't impacting the silhouette of this one enough to make it feel intentional or interesting imo. It doesn't look awful, but, for me personally and with no shade, unless it's done on a big boxy shirt like I first said it reads more as insecure than anything else.
Yeah just wanted to be sure, thanks for the input :)
roll a pack of smokes in em