Article: Von Baer, UK
Minute-One Impression: What gets judged before your argument
Picture this: you’ve spent weeks preparing your opening statement, burning the midnight oil like John Grisham drafting his next bestseller. You stride into the courtroom – confident, articulate – and yet the judge notices your shiny suit before your carefully crafted words.
That’s the courtroom in a nutshell: visual first, verbal second (source).
First impressions here are like the front page of The Times – if the headline doesn’t land, the rest barely gets read.
Conservative clothing signals respect, calms attention, and funnels focus where it belongs – your case, not your outfit. Stick to navy or charcoal suits, a crisp shirt, a restrained tie. No novelty, no shine, no noise. Imagine the ghost of Justice Holmes raising an eyebrow at your paisley neon tie – awkward. Even New York courts get prescriptive: “Wear conservative clothing.”
- Goal: disappear as a distraction; let substance stand out.
- Fast filter: if a piece would look at home at a nightclub or on the cover of Rolling Stone, leave it.
- Numerical cue: courtroom lighting sits around 300-500 lux, which makes shiny fabrics glare like a bad Broadway spotlight.
- Feature recommendation: fabrics rated under 10% gloss reflectance keep the focus steady.
Section takeaway – first contact: Tone down color, texture, and pattern so the argument speaks louder than the outfit.
Suit Math that never loses: fabric, fit, silhouette

A suit is less clothing, more architecture. Think Christopher Wren designing St Paul’s Cathedral – it’s structure, proportion, balance.
- Fabric: mid-weight wool (260-300 g/m², Super 100s-120s). Matte finish prevents turning fluorescent bulbs into disco strobes.
- Color: navy or charcoal. Two-button, notch lapel. Single-breasted – quiet authority, not fashion experiment.
- Fit checks: jacket covers seat; sleeves reveal ¼-½ inch of cuff; trousers hemmed with a single break.
- Alterations that matter: waist suppression, shoulder cleanup, sleeve head trimmed. Avoid skinny lapels or cropped jackets.
- Numerical cue: lapels 2.75-3.25 inches wide balance the chest; jacket length 30-32 inches fits most men 5’10”.
- Feature recommendation: half- or full-canvas construction (about 1 mm thick horsehair) molds naturally over time – unlike glued fusibles that peel faster than a paperback in the rain.
Would you rather look like a partner or like you got lost en route to Milan Fashion Week?
Section takeaway – the shell: Tailoring says “competence” before you utter a word.
Bag/Briefcase Strategy that carries your day without becoming the story

Briefcases are the lawyer’s movable fortress.
Would Blackstone have hauled Commentaries in a backpack? Hardly.
According to Von Baer, you want a structured bag that sits up, opens wide, and closes fast. Forget floppy totes. As Von Baer notes: “Wear polished leather shoes and carry a clean, structured briefcase. The briefcase color should match your belt and shoes.”
- Capacity plan: laptop, padfolio, two redwelds, spare shirt, chargers.
- Security flow: keep badge handy, ditch jangling keys.
- Organization: tech one side, files center, pens/cards zipped; outer pocket for ID and parking stub.
- Numerical cue: width 15-17 inches, height 11-13 inches, depth 3-5 inches; ≤4 lbs empty weight.
- Feature recommendation: handles stitched 5-7 stitches per cm; leather thickness 1.6-2.0 mm.
Imagine pulling a file like a magician producing silk scarves – fluid, controlled, expected.
Section takeaway – carry discipline: A structured briefcase projects order and speeds security lines.
Shirt Geometry that frames credibility

A shirt collar is your courtroom scaffolding – it frames the jawline, steadies the tie, keeps the whole structure standing. Ignore it, and your presentation collapses like an unedited manuscript.
- Collar height: 1.5 inches, tall enough to show above a jacket lapel.
- Spread: semi-spread, versatile for Windsor or Half-Windsor. Save button-downs for coffee with colleagues, not juries.
- Cuffs: single barrel, snug; French cuffs only if you’re certain chambers won’t see it as vanity.
- Color: white for hearings, pale blue for marathon trial days (a trick as old as Churchill’s shirts – blue masks fatigue).
- Backup: keep a pressed spare in your car or briefcase.
- Numerical cue: 100-120 TPI cotton weave ensures opacity; collar point length 2.75-3 inches keeps ties anchored.
- Feature recommendation: wrinkle-resistant cotton/elastane blends stay crisp 8-10 hours, ideal for all-day dockets.
Ever tried cross-examining while tugging at a collapsing collar? It’s like trying to lecture while your microphone cuts out – unforgivable.
Section takeaway – the canvas: A stable collar and clean placket keep the tie aligned and your credibility intact. See more info here.
Tie Tactics that calm rooms instead of claiming them

A tie is punctuation: subtle, final, controlled. Get it wrong, and your case looks like a sentence missing its period.
- Material: matte silk, width 2.75-3.25 inches.
- Knots: Half-Windsor (speed, symmetry), full Windsor (higher collars, broad chests).
- Patterns: repp stripes, faint dots, micro-geometrics. Save cartoon ducks for weekend barbecues.
- Colors: navy, burgundy, deep forest, charcoal.
- Micro-test: stand ten feet from a mirror. If the tie flickers like a TV test pattern, it’s out.
- Numerical cue: tie length ends at belt buckle midpoint; knot height 1.5 inches.
- Feature recommendation: ties woven 40-50 picks per cm resist puckering and last 200+ knots before showing fatigue.
Ever wonder why senators lean heavily on burgundy ties? It reads strong but not hostile – the courtroom equivalent of a well-placed rhetorical question.
Section takeaway – the signal line: A controlled tie steadies the whole picture.
Shoe Code that passes security, stairs, and scrutiny

Shoes are the prologue to your performance. Imagine Atticus Finch with squeaky soles – you’d remember the squeak, not the speech.
- Style: black cap-toe Oxfords for trials; dark brown Oxfords in certain civil courts.
- Construction: Goodyear-welted, resolable; rubber toppy for slick marble.
- Finish: clean, even polish – not mirrors.
- Care kit: cloth, dauber, polish wipes.
- Numerical cue: heel height 1 inch; sole thickness 4-6 mm; lifespan 8-10 years with resoling every 18-24 months.
- Feature recommendation: full-grain calf leather 1.2-1.4 mm thick; shoe weight 450-550 g each for daylong comfort.
Who do you trust more: the lawyer clomping in like a tourist at the Louvre, or the one stepping silent but steady?
Section takeaway – ground game: Shoes polished, posture steady: discipline telegraphed.
Quiet Accessories that earn zero objections

Accessories should whisper like T.S. Eliot, not shout like a tabloid headline.
- Watch: analog, case diameter 38-40 mm, no buzzing notifications and nothing overly flash (source).
- Belt: buckle ≤1.25 inches, leather aligned to shoes.
- Socks: over-calf, 18 inches long, discreet dark patterns.
- Pens: blue ink, duplicates handy; barrel 9-11 mm diameter.
- Feature recommendation: fountain pens with 0.5-0.7 mm nibs; ballpoints with 0.7 mm tips for fatigue-free writing.
Remember Cicero’s warning: “The face is a picture of the mind, the eyes its interpreter.” Accessories, too, translate your discipline – or your distraction.
Section takeaway – micro-credibility: Minimal accessories reduce clutter, both visual and mental.
Climate & Season Controls that keep you steady all day

Courthouses mimic Dickensian plots: one moment sweltering, next chapter icy.
- Layering: unlined/half-lined wool in summer; undershirt shields against sweat; scarf, gloves in winter.
- Rain plan: compact umbrella, shoe wipes, sleeve for exhibits.
- Fit under movement: jacket must stay closed while gesturing.
- Numerical cue: AC averages 68-72°F; undershirt weight 150-170 g/m².
- Feature recommendation: umbrellas 38-42 inch canopy, under 1 lb.
Would you rather lose your point to discomfort or keep composure steady?
Section takeaway – thermal poise: Prepare for climate shifts so comfort never betrays confidence.
Local Variables & House Rules that trump general advice

Courts resemble publishers – each with house style, quirks, even eccentricities. Ignore them, and you’ll be redlined like a bad manuscript (source).
When unsure, ask clerks or observe proceedings a day early. Official rules frequently advise conservative attire.
- Checklists: tech bans, hat bans, ID requirements, file limits.
- Align: if stricter, default to black shoes, white shirt, darkest suit.
- Numerical cue: security lines 3-7 minutes; build 15-20 min buffer.
- Feature recommendation: RFID-blocking wallets rated 13.56 MHz, ≤3 mm thick.
Would you rather be remembered for sharp argument or a delayed arrival? Easy answer.
Section takeaway – context wins: When custom conflicts with taste, obey the room, not fashion.