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3. STRAIGHT JEANS WITH A LOOSER FIT SUIT MUSCULAR, CHUNKY OR HUSKY BODIES Don't let subcategories of straight jeans throw you. They may say regular, classic, relaxed or athletic but are
still straight, only with a fuller cut through the seat and legs and some stretch for ease. Slouchy legs are fine, but skip anything too saggy, baggy or stiff (like raw denim). Consider
pairing them with untucked button-downs and tees for extra tummy coverage, and add a jacket to up your style game. Splash News / Alamy Stock Photo 4. THE DARKER AND MORE EVEN THE WASH, THE
DRESSIER THE JEAN Medium- to dark-blue and black denim are dressier than light faded jeans for a professional, businesslike or more polished look, day or night. Choose a uniform color with
no extreme whiskering (prefabricated pattern creases) or shadow fades. Just add a tailored blazer or vest, a crisp button-down, and ankle boots or loafers. Treat them like dress pants or
chinos, but with no ironed creases _ever_. Splash News / Alamy Stock Photo 5. FADED, SLIGHTLY DISTRESSED JEANS _ARE _COOL ON MATURE MEN While dark, even washes have their own appeal, so do
vintage washes. Forget rips and tears and go for broken-in, light to medium blues that look like you've had them for years. They may have been stonewashed or sanded slightly at the
seams, knees and thighs during processing to get that exact effect. Keep the style straight and otherwise classic — no flares, bell-bottoms or boot cuts — and add in a leather jacket and
your favorite tees, flannel shirts and sweaters like Bruce Willis. Europa Press 6. THE RIGHT LENGTH IS CRUCIAL This is where it is easy to really mess up. How jeans "break" — where
your pants hit the top of your shoe — has changed and there are options. If you're a traditional conservative kind of guy, get your straight jeans tailored to a half-break so they
break and crease in front and fall pretty straight to mid-heel in back. And if you're a laid-back gent, casual and cool like Antonio Banderas, let them drape and stack up in a loose
fall on the way down before fully breaking front and back. Just be aware that too much width and excess fabric bunching up at the ankles looks too long, careless and sloppy. Storms Media
Group / Alamy Stock Photo 7. KEEP CUFFING UNDER CONTROL If you're hipster edgy, a half inch to an inch double mini roll looks stylish the way Jeff Goldblum does it. Big wide cuffs are
best left to teens and millennials who wear skinny jeans and tapered leg styles. WENN Ltd / Alamy Stock Photo 8. YOU CAN PAIR JEANS WITH A DENIM OR CHAMBRAY SHIRT The "Canadian
tuxedo" — doubling up denim on top and bottom — has gone from a sometimes trend to a forever "do." Fans include Ziggy Marley. Experiment by pairing old with new and shade
differences or even black jeans with a blue jeans jacket. Marc Piasecki/Getty Images 9. PAIR JEANS WITH STYLISH PIECES Keep your jeans look personal and updated with tops and footwear like
Tom Cruise. Your favorite jeans can go rugged and sporty with a T-shirt, hoodie and sneakers; edgy by adding a black tee, leather jacket and black Chelsea boots; polished by doing a blazer,
button-down shirt and lace-ups or loafers. Keep tees relaxed, not tight, and try half-tucking the front as you layer for less bulk at the waist. Tone jeans to tops and shoes for a longer,
taller, sleeker illusion, and add a pop of color with a scarf, shirt or whimsical socks.