To upload a logo - Click the Choose File button to open the dialog box. Choose the image file you want to upload and click the Open button. (These image formats are acceptable: jpeg, gif, png.) MAKE SURE THERE ARE NO NON-ALPHANUMERIC CHARACTERS IN THE FILE NAME Enter desired transparency threshold value. (See note on Transparency Threshold below for more information.) Click the Upload button. You can adjust the logo size, placement and rotation once the upload is complete by clicking on the logo within the main image.  Notes:

 Transparency Threshold -  Ideally uploaded logos must have a transparent background. If your logo does not have this property you can optionally have its background be made transparent provided it is white (or 'near' white) by entering a transparency threshold value. A threshold value of 0 will make transparent all pixels with RGB values where the R, G, and B components are all exactly 255, i.e., only white pixels will be transparent. On the other hand, a non-zero value, say N, will make transparent all pixels with RGB values where the R, G, and B components have values from (255-N) to 255, i.e., white as well as 'near' white pixels will be transparent. 

Really important article and yes John Smedley is very good at this with great choice but i find their cotton can be a bit heavy

Other brands you might consider is Sunspel sea island cotton which is very good although as someone said their colours can be somewhat limited Plus i think Zanone ice cotton polo is as good as it gets finally James Perse is good but hard to find in UK and they make alot of polos out of different fabrics but dont always differentiate them so hard to repeat buy what you like although the one i am wearing today say Supima cotton made in usa


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Using the now extinct SS Friday Polo in South Florida has given me the ability to go casual with polo and trousers or smart casual with a light jacket because of the collar. Would like those SS versions to return.

The things that affect it include the height of the collar, the length and position of the points, its rigidity, and how high it sits on the body of the polo. See the discussion on the Dartmoor here for more detail

Thanks you Simon . It is nice article. It is really difficult to wear nice outfits during warm weather. I use to wear smedley polo in sea island coton . It is not too bad. Maybe there is other materials to feel cooler when it is going 30C ? Looking forward to the next episodes.

How do these compare to the Saman Amel polo collar knits? I was able to order a black polo collar sweater (long sleeve) when they were last in NYC. I also ordered a blue cotton button-through with a collar. They were able to hem the sleeves, making it a short sleeved piece. I have worn the blue piece a few times this spring, and I am loving it. Both were MTM orders so the fit was superb.

I have never owned a black polo and am intrigued by the idea of getting one. However, my concern is with shoes. While the black polo may go with khaki/white/grey shorts, would brown/navy loafers go with them?

I recently bought a JS Bradwell in black. I believe this is the long sleeve version of the Isis but could be mistaken. The collar is far from perfect however it has the huge benefit of looking good with the jacket off.

Hi Simon!

With most of my polos I try to keep low contrast and therefore end up wearing navy polo with dark grey chinos and dark brown loafers. Do you find low contrast outfits elegant?

What are you views on maroon and mustard polos?

I agree, Simon, Gap is not a convincing quality for the money, the collar becomes wavy, the fabric is thin and does not hold its shape well. M&S polo is the best option for the same money. Polos with pique fabric are good or just suit for me)

What about attaching button to the collar of the same polo you are wearing at the moment. Would it make the collar smart as asked by a previous user?

It means buying a polo from a normal brand attaching buttons by going to a tailor. Very difficult finding a brand which actually has stiff collars.

Actually over timr im glad i still have my uniqlo knit polos and i wear them arguably even more than my anthology ones due to fit and design reasons (eg. My uniqlo one has a longer sleeve length and is slightly trimmer in the body and doesnt blouse as much ehen tucked out. For the anthology one it looks better tucked into long pants). Do note uniqlo has stopped selling knit polos for guys in a long while though. If they come back ill most definetely buy them again

Could you share your opinion on knitted shirt?

Also do you find knitted shirt to be associated with older people or could it worn by people in mid twenties and thirties?

Thinking maybe it can be as versatile as a knitted polo in summer.

It would be great if you could advice on a couple of things.

1) What is your opinion on pique Cotton polo shirts from normal brands like H&M and Tommy Hilfiger. Would they look elegant?

2) There is a brand making knitted polo in viscose. Is viscose fine for a knitted polo?

Bringing style and comfort to your wardrobe, our polo shirts look great dressed up or down. Whether you're looking to upgrade your weekend look or refresh your smart casual wardrobe for work, you'll find an Original Penguin polo you love in our great selection of men's polo shirts.

Polo shirts have evolved from their origins in polo and tennis, and our sport polos definitely give the menswear staple a modern spin. You'll look sharp at sport, work, or play in any of our polos. With their slim cut and slick style, they can go anywhere, from a buttoned-up work meeting to a night out with the guys.

Polo is a ball game that is played on horseback, a traditional field sport and one of the world's oldest known team sports.[9] The game is played by two opposing teams with the objective of scoring using a long-handled wooden mallet to hit a small hard ball through the opposing team's goal. Each team has four mounted riders, and the game usually lasts one to two hours, divided into periods called chukkas or chukkers.

Polo has been called "the sport of kings",[10] and has become a spectator sport for equestrians and high society, often supported by sponsorship. The progenitor of Polo and its variants existed from the 6th century BC to the 1st century AD, as an equestrian game played by the nomadic Iranian and Turkic peoples.[4] In Persia, where the sport evolved and developed, it was at first a training game for cavalry units, usually the royal guard or other elite troops.[5] It is now popular around the world, with well over 100 member countries in the Federation of International Polo, played professionally in 16 countries, and was an Olympic sport from 1900 to 1936.

Arena polo is an indoor or semi-outdoor variant with similar rules, and is played with three riders per team. The playing field is smaller, enclosed and usually of compacted sand or fine aggregate, and often indoors. Arena polo has more maneuvering due to space limitations, and uses an air-inflated ball slightly larger than the hard solid ball used in field polo. Standard mallets are used, though slightly larger-head arena mallets are an option.

Valuable for training cavalry, the game was played from Constantinople, where Emperor Theodosius II constructed a polo ground early in the 5th century,[15] to Japan by the Middle Ages. The game also spread south to Arabia and to India and Tibet.

After the Muslim conquests to the Ayyubid and Mameluke dynasties of Egypt and the Levant, their elites favoured it above all other sports. Notable sultans such as Saladin and Baybars were known to play it and encourage it in their courts.[18] Saladin was known for being a skilled polo player, which contributed to his cavalry training.[19][20] Polo sticks were featured as one of the suits on the Mamluk precursor to modern-day playing cards. Europeans transformed the polo stick suit into the "clubs" of the "Latin" decks, as polo was little known to them at that time.[21]

The modern, international, game of polo is derived from the form played in Manipur, India, where it was known as sagol kangjei. Also in use in Manipur were the game's Tibetic names, polo or pulu, referring to the wooden ball, and it was these terms, anglicised, which were adopted for the sport's name in its slow spread to the west. A European polo club was established in the town of Silchar in Assam, India, in 1859, the English tea planters having learnt it from Manipuri incomers.[7][25]

The origins of the game in Manipur are traced to yet earlier precursors of sagol kangjei.[26] This was one of three forms of hockey in Manipur, the other ones being field hockey (called khong kangjei) and wrestling-hockey (called mukna kangjei). Local rituals such as those connected to the Ibudhou Marjing, the winged-pony god of polo and the creation-ritual episodes of the Lai Haraoba festival enacting the life of his son, Khoriphaba, the polo-playing god of sports. These may indicate an origin earlier than the historical records of Manipur. Later, according to Cheitharol Kumbaba, a royal chronicle of King Kangba, who ruled Manipur much earlier than Nongda Lairen Pakhangba (33 CE) introduced sagol kangjei ('kangjei on horseback'). Further regular playing of this game commenced in 1605, during the reign of King Khagemba under newly framed rules of the game.

The oldest polo ground in the world is the Imphal Polo Ground in Manipur State. The history of this polo ground is contained in the royal chronicle Cheitharol Kumbaba starting from 33 CE. Lieutenant (later Major General) Joseph Ford Sherer, the father of modern polo, visited the state and played on this polo ground in the 1850s. Lord Curzon, the Viceroy of India visited the state in 1901 and measured the polo ground as "225 yards long and 110 yards wide" (206 m  101 m).[29] 9af72c28ce

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