I remember admiring the swell clothes, the elegant long coats, the boots, that Jimmy Smits and Kim Delaney wore on NYPD Blue when they were out tracking down perps. Their clothes looked expensive and understated-elegant. Dennis Franz, more of a blue-collar type, just sweated it out in his short sleeved white shirts and skinny tie.
We’re never going to see eye to eye on the scrubs issue, CCL.
Much of what I wrote comes straight from the DVD commentaries. Scrubs were ugly, wardrobe altered everything for the show.
Another thing to bear in mind is that on the one hand proper fitting and tailoring can make a suit look at first glance a step up in market level from its sale price, and on the other, higher-quality clothes are usually more tolerant of fittings and alterations, specially the repeated fittings, alterations and cleanings it’ll get if it’s studio wardrobe.
In our time, fitting and tailoring is a sort of lost tradition, as witness the rise of “suit separates” at the lower level of purchasing, which was the natural evolution of a long trend at the downmarket level to wear the suit as it comes off the rack with no other alteration but hemming the pants (led to people with non-fashion-standard measurements wearing jackets one size off just to get the proper size pants). We’ve become a nation of people wearing 16.5/34-35 shirts and W38/I32 trousers as they came out of the store, regardless if our true measurements are 16.5/34 and W37/I31. Often the wardrobe department can “upgrade” or “downgrade” the look of a character merely by letting the clothes be well tailored vs. ill-fitting, and the accessories be fancy vs. cheap, as **belladonna **observed.
I don’t recall saying wardrobe didn’t alter everything to make it fit better. What I said was that not everything available before 2001 was a basic unisex scrub that fit like a circus tent.
Most famously the chicken shirt. (scroll all the way to the bottom of that link).
OTOH, though, Roseanne was also famous for its characters having overly elaborate Halloween costumes that IRL would probably cost far more that what they could afford.
$50-60,000 a year isn’t getting paid great?! Ye Gods. :eek: I’d cut off a limb to make that much.
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It’s very good in general, relative to the national economy, just not that “great” for NYC. As per the NYPD page (followed from Justin_Bailey’s link), base pay plus allowances for a rookie leaving Academy is $45,000 but a plain beat officer maxes out at double that (not counting overtime) (so don’t cut any limbs, they’d rather you have them all). The NY Metropolitan Area is expensive to live and work (and pay employees).
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