Jeans on men scream easy confidence.
That laid-back edge that turns heads without shouting.
I love spotting those outfits where everything just… fits, you know?
Like your partner’s weekend look suddenly has intention, pulling you both into sharper adventures together.
But wait, me doubting my own guy’s style game sometimes? Total mood.
These 21 picks shift that quick.
Simple swaps for him that feel empowering for you too…
Ready to borrow ideas for the fellas in your world?
Blue Jeans with a Gray Short-Sleeve Tee

Look at this straightforward setup, just a light gray short-sleeve tee hugging the torso without any fuss, paired right up with those medium-wash blue jeans that sit comfortably at the waist and fall straight down to the ankles. The jeans have that classic straight-leg cut, not too skinny, not baggy either, kinda the Goldilocks zone for everyday wear, you know? White sneakers ground it all, super clean low-tops with those chunky soles that add a bit of lift without trying too hard. I mean, why overload when this balance makes your frame read taller, legs looking longer because the hem breaks just right over the shoes.
What gets me is how the gray fabric picks up the blue denim’s tone without clashing, soft cotton on top against the sturdy twill below, creating this seamless shift from casual upper to solid lower half. You pull this on for weekends or even a quick office pivot if your job allows, and it holds its own because nothing screams for attention, everything supports. Ever notice how a plain tee like that draws the eye to your face instead? Yeah, that’s the quiet power here, flattering shoulders and chest without bulk.
Sure, I wondered at first if white sneakers were too basic, but nah, they seal the deal, keeping feet light while the jeans do the heavy lifting on structure. Repeat, the jeans structure. Outfit works because it’s honest, no tricks, just pieces that fit real life and still turn heads subtly.
Open Green Jacket with Light Jeans

This guy layers an olive green cotton jacket right over a plain white button-down shirt, sleeves rolled a touch casual, and pairs it with straight-leg light wash jeans that hit just right at the ankles. The jacket has that boxy workwear shape you know, with patch pockets and a bit of structure, but worn open so it doesn’t overwhelm. White shirt underneath keeps everything clean and sharp, no fussing with tucks or anything. Jeans are relaxed fit, faded blue, showing some wear that makes them feel lived-in already.
What pulls this together for me is how the green against the light denim creates this easy contrast, nothing forced. You can wear this striding down the street or grabbing coffee, and it reads put-together without trying too hard. I mean, those white sneakers, chunky Nike ones, ground it all, make the legs look balanced even on a taller frame like his. Sometimes I wonder if I’d pull off green like that, but on you fellas it just works, adds that intentional edge to jeans.
The whole thing flatters because proportions stay loose yet defined, jacket hem hitting mid-hip, jeans slim but not tight. Kinda makes me think back to when I revamped my brother’s closet years ago… he swore by neutrals only, but slipping in army green changed everything for his off-duty days. Anyway, swap the shirt for a tee if you want even more laid back, but this setup? Solid base.
Blue Chambray Shirt and Dark Jeans

Look at this setup, a light blue chambray shirt hanging loose over those deep blue jeans, kinda soft against the denim’s texture you know. The shirt’s untucked edges give everything room to breathe, not too fussy, and paired with that brown belt pulling it together without trying hard. Jeans have this slim cut through the thigh fading just a bit at the knees, shows wear in a good way, makes the legs read longer somehow even standing casual like that. Why does the chambray work here? It lightens the whole dark bottom half, keeps you from looking swallowed up, especially if you’re broader in the build.
Brown leather boots seal it, low ankle style with that worn-in shine matching the belt perfectly, pulls the eye down smooth. I mean, swap in sneakers and it’d still hold but these add a touch more polish, like you’re headed out but not rushing. Once thought boots like that were too much for jeans daily, but nah, they ground it, make the outfit move from house to coffee run easy. You pull this on, suddenly the mirror says put-together without the ironing board drama.
Short hem on the jeans brushes the boots right, no bunching mess. Feels right for weekends or whatever, yeah?
Navy Sweater and Jeans Basics

Look close at this guy standing there, navy blue sweater hugging his frame just right, paired down with those darker blue jeans that fall straight and easy. The sweater’s knit looks soft, crew neck sitting neat without any fuss, sleeves pushed casual over the hands a bit. Jeans have that worn-in feel already, faded spots here and there, straight cut skimming the legs without pulling tight. And those brown leather shoes, kinda polished but not shiny, grounding everything. I mean, what pulls this together so well? It’s the color match, navy on navy-ish tones creating this quiet harmony that says put-together without trying hard, you know?
Switch to the stance though, one leg crossed lazy, and suddenly the whole thing reads confident, like he’s owning the space. Makes me think back to when I was helping my brother pack for job interviews years ago, he hated dressing up but this kinda combo would’ve been perfect, no tie needed. The sweater adds warmth up top, balances the casual denim below, flattering on broader shoulders because it skims not clings. Jeans sit mid-rise probably, comfortable through the hips, and that makes movement free, which is key for all-day wear.
Shoes deserve a nod too, those brown ones with the slight heel lift the ankle area, keeps it from going sloppy. Sometimes I doubt if dark denim works for everyone, but here it does, slimming the silhouette naturally. Outfit direction? Total laid-back polish, swap the shoes for sneakers on weekends and you’re set. Kinda brilliant how minimal it stays yet feels intentional.
Striped Sweater with Ripped Jeans

Look at this navy and white striped sweater, long sleeves hugging just right without being tight, paired right down to those light blue jeans all ripped up at the knees and thighs. The stripes are classic breton style you know, thick enough to stand out but not overpowering, and they hit perfect against the faded denim wash that feels worn in from real life not some factory distress. I always think stripes like this pull the eye up top making shoulders look broader, which yeah works wonders for guys wanting that balanced proportion thing without trying too hard.
Jeans are slim through the leg but not skinny, sitting low on the waist with that subtle roll at the ankle showing off tan suede sneakers, kinda chunky soles in off-white that ground the whole thing. Why does this read so put together even in a casual slouch? It’s the contrast probably, crisp sweater fabric next to soft frayed edges, plus those sneakers add a touch of texture that elevates without screaming fancy. Me I once overlooked suede for jeans thought it’d be too much but nope changes everything.
And the way he leans in elbow on table coffee in hand it sells the laid back vibe but you could swap that for a walk around town same effect. Fragment of a thought here those jeans have just enough give for comfort all day yet hold shape so legs don’t drown. Doubt myself sometimes on recommending rips to more conservative types but trust this combo convinces even them it’s stylish not sloppy.
Black Jeans and Gray Bomber Basics

You know when black jeans hug just right without trying too hard, that’s this guy right here, slim cut sitting perfect on his frame with the hem breaking clean over those Vans. Gray bomber jacket layered open over a plain white tee, the kind of fade from light to dark that adds subtle interest you barely notice at first but pulls everything sharper. Makes the whole thing feel put together yet zero fuss, like he threw it on for a quick coffee run but ended up looking sharper than planned. I mean, why does dropping one hand in the pocket make black denim read less skinny more versatile, almost wonders to myself sometimes if I could steal that lean for my own closet tweaks.
The white tee underneath keeps it breathable, no logos screaming for attention, just crisp cotton peeking out that balances the jacket’s sheen. Footwear seals it, those classic Vans with the white stripe echoing the tee for a sneaky repeat that ties low to high without overdoing. Flattering because the slim jeans elongate without squeezing, jacket adds shoulder without bulk, perfect for days you want casual command presence. Kinda wish more guys leaned into bombers like this, shifts from basic to bold real quick. Or wait, do I overthink the fade sometimes, yeah probably but it works here repeated for that edge.
White Linen Shirt and Blue Jeans

Look how that white linen shirt drapes so casually, kinda boxy but not sloppy, with the top buttons undone showing just a hint of chest, paired against those medium wash blue jeans that sit straight through the leg without any fuss. The fabric on the shirt has this natural crinkle, you know, like it’s been worn in from real life, and it softens the whole rigid denim vibe below. Makes your torso look broader in a good way, shoulders popping naturally from the loose sleeves rolled once or twice maybe.
Jeans are the star here really, faded just enough at the thighs to feel broken in, ending clean above simple black sandals that let your feet breathe, no socks needed. What gets me is how the white brightens everything up, pulls focus upward so your stance reads confident even leaning casual. I mean, tried pulling this off myself once in a guy’s shirt borrowed from an ex, felt oversized and awkward until I saw it works when you own the proportions.
Flattering because linen breathes against cotton denim, no bulk, just balance. Short hem on the shirt skims without tucking fully, lets the jeans do their thing hugging hips lightly then straightening out. Question is, why don’t more guys do this daily? Changes jeans from basic to something with quiet polish, your legs look longer from the slight crop at the ankle. Ramble on, but yeah, repeat, the white linen elevates it all without trying hard.
Ripped Black Jeans with Faded Band Tee

That Nirvana shirt catches your eye first right all washed out grayish black with the Nevermind cover print faded just enough to feel lived in not brand new stiff cotton I mean. It’s loose on the body hanging off the shoulders a bit which softens the whole silhouette you know makes broad or slim frames read relaxed without trying too hard. The jeans though black denim distressed with rips straight down the thighs and knees letting bits of skin peek through they’re baggy through the leg straight cut almost pooling a tad at the chunky white sneakers below.
What pulls this together so well for everyday is how the white kicks lift everything the dark top and bottom would otherwise swallow up they add that clean break brightens your stance literally grounds you while keeping legs looking longish. I remember once borrowing a guy’s ripped pair for a photoshoot thought it’d overwhelm me but nope the contrast did the trick same principle here. Feels approachable yet put together kinda like you rolled out of bed onto a casual date no fuss but eyes linger.
Those sneakers have that thick sole too retro ish white leather scuffed lightly matching the tee’s vibe without stealing focus. Whole thing says laid back confidently and yeah even if your jeans aren’t perfect rips yet distress ’em yourself for that intentional edge works every time.
Layered Navy Cardigan with Grey Jeans

This navy cardigan thrown open over a plain white tee, you know it just pulls the whole thing together without trying too hard. Paired with those medium grey jeans that have a bit of a slim fit through the leg, not too tight but enough to give shape. The knit on the cardigan looks soft, woolly maybe, draping easy across the shoulders and letting the white tee peek out underneath. Makes the torso look balanced, right? Like the cardigan adds that subtle structure while the jeans keep everything grounded and moveable.
I always think grey jeans like this work because they bridge casual and put-together, especially when the wash isn’t too faded or dark. Here the combo with navy keeps it monochromatic-ish but the white tee breaks it up, adds freshness. Question is, why does leaning into neutrals feel so reliable? Oh, and those jeans sit just right at the waist, no bunching, which I bet flatters most builds by not cutting in weird. Kinda wish I had a guy friend who wore this exact setup back in my early styling days, would have saved me nagging him about baggy pants.
The coffee cup in hand? Total prop for that everyday ready vibe, but really it’s the open layering that sells it. Navy against grey, clean lines. You pull this on for a weekend errand or porch hang, and bam, stylish without the fuss. Sometimes I second-guess if cardigans read too preppy, but nah, not like this… relaxed sleeves pushed up a touch, jeans cuffed maybe? Wait, no cuff here, straight hem works fine too. Solid choice all around.
Blue Shirt Tucked into Dark Jeans

Look at this light blue shirt, kinda chambray feel to it, tucked neatly into those slim dark jeans. The shirt’s sleeves rolled just a bit, not too fussy, and it fits without pulling tight anywhere, which I always think makes a guy look put-together even when he’s just walking down the street you know. Dark jeans hug the legs without being skinny, they have that slight fade at the thighs that adds real wear-in character, and pairing with the tan suede shoes? Smart move.
Those shoes, desert boot style maybe, with the lace-up front and chunky sole, ground the whole thing so it doesn’t float away into office territory. I mean, why does switching to suede from leather change everything like that, suddenly it’s weekend ready but still sharp. You pull this on for coffee run or meeting friends, feels balanced because the blue shirt lightens the dark denim, keeps your silhouette lean and approachable. Once had a friend swear by this combo after bombing a date in all black, switched next time and bam confidence shift.
Shorts no, but these jeans lengthen the stride visually, especially with the slight heel lift from the boots. Ramble over, but seriously you can copy this tomorrow.
Gray Henley and Jeans with Suede Slippers

That soft gray henley pulls everything together here you know the kind with those little buttons down the front and long sleeves that just hang right without being baggy or tight. Paired with straight blue jeans that sit comfortably mid rise no fuss about it and they break perfectly over the ankles showing off brown suede slippers that look worn in a good way. I always think this combo works because the henley adds that subtle layer men need for cooler days inside or out it flatters broader shoulders by skimming without clinging and the jeans ground it all keeping things grounded casual but put together.
What gets me is how the textures play off each other that knit feel against denim then fuzzy suede below it creates quiet interest without trying too hard. You pull this on for weekends at home or quick errands and suddenly you’re not just comfy you’re looking like you meant to dress that way. Ever notice how slippers like these make jeans feel more approachable kinda sneaky stylish if you ask me though I once tried suede ones myself and scuffed them up in a week so maybe stick to indoors ha.
The overall direction screams relaxed reliability the gray neutralizes the blue so nothing overpowers and you end up confident stepping out or staying in.
Hoodie Layered Under Denim Jacket with Straight Jeans

Straight-leg blue jeans hugging just right, not too tight or baggy, paired with that classic denim jacket in a faded wash over a simple gray hoodie. The jacket’s open front lets the hoodie’s zipper peek through, adding this easy layered thing without trying too hard, you know? White tee underneath grounds it all, keeps everything from feeling sloppy. I always think this setup works because the denim tones echo each other but the hoodie softens the edges, makes your frame look balanced, broader shoulders kinda naturally.
Sneakers in that muted green, scuffed up a bit, ground the whole look perfectly on concrete or wherever you’re headed. Why does the straight leg shine here? It elongates without screaming skinny, gives room for real movement, and those cuffs at the ankle? Subtle lift that draws the eye down smartly. Me, I once doubted denim on denim, thought it’d overwhelm, but seeing it move like this changes everything, pulls back to reliable everyday sharp.
Layering pulls it together though, hoodie adds warmth you can actually use…
Gray Sweater and Dark Jeans

You see this gray crewneck sweater pulled over a pair of slim dark jeans, and it just clicks for those days when you want low key but put together. The sweater’s that heathered knit, soft and a little textured so it doesn’t look flat against the body, falling loose enough around the torso while the jeans taper down clean to those brown leather boots. Boots are laced, rugged with some natural wear on the toes, grounding the whole thing in real life instead of stiff perfection.
What gets me is how the dark wash on the jeans picks up the subtle tones in the gray up top, creating this seamless flow that works whether you’re standing tall or kicking back seated like he is here… makes the legs read longer somehow even folded casual, you know? I tried something close once on a guy friend who swore by it for weekend errands, changed his whole outlook on “boring” basics, but wait do the boots make it or just seal the deal? Either way.
And yeah, the rolled cuff at the ankle showing a flash of sock? Subtle move that keeps it from feeling sloppy, adds intention without fuss. Sometimes I second guess mixing knits with denim but this proves it every time, broadens the shoulders visually too with that relaxed drape. Solid for pulling on repeat.
Navy Blazer Draped Over Jeans and Tee

Look at this setup, white tee hugging just right against those medium blue jeans, and then the navy blazer slung casual over one shoulder like you’re about to head out but not in a rush. It’s that easy layer that pulls everything together without trying too hard, you know? Makes the whole thing read sharper, turns basic denim into something with purpose. The jeans sit nice on the hips, straight leg falling clean, and that tee’s crisp enough to show off shoulders but soft too.
What gets me is how the blazer’s color plays off the denim, both blues but different enough to layer without clashing, kinda deepens the whole palette. I mean, drape it like that and suddenly you’re not just in jeans, you’re styled. Ever notice how a jacket over the arm changes the energy from sloppy to deliberate? Flattering on most builds because it breaks up the lines, draws the eye up then down smooth.
Jeans look lived in but paired smart here. White tee keeps it fresh, no logos or fuss. Blazer adds that edge, makes you stand taller I swear. Tried something similar once on a trip and forgot how quick it shifts casual to put together, repeat after me, shoulders back.
Soft Gray Sweater over Ripped Blue Jeans

This guy layers a roomy gray knit sweater right over those faded blue jeans with rips at the knees, you know the kind that look lived-in but pulled together. The sweater’s got this subtle texture, almost like fisherman’s knit but softer, hanging loose on the frame without overwhelming it, and paired with the jeans it creates balance, the top bulky enough to offset those distressed spots down low. White sneakers anchor everything, chunky soles that add height subtly, making the whole thing move from sidewalk to coffee run without missing a beat.
Why does it read so intentionally casual? Because the neutrals play nice together, gray against faded denim keeps it grounded, not flashy, and I always think that’s key when you’re building outfits around jeans like this, especially ripped ones that could veer sloppy if not checked by something structured up top. The jeans fit snug through the thigh then taper, showing off shape without tightness, flattering on most builds if you size right. Sneakers in bright white pop just enough, drawing the eye down clean.
Had a moment once doubting my own ripped jeans phase back in my early twenties, thought they screamed try-hard until I saw styling like this, now I’m sold again. You throw on a similar sweater over your favorites, roll the cuffs maybe, and suddenly it’s versatile for cooler days or layering under a jacket later. Keeps proportions in check too, broader shoulders from the knit make the legs look leaner. Simple tweaks like that elevate the laid-back feel.
Turtleneck Sweater and Blue Jeans

Look at this dark grey turtleneck, fine knit pulling smooth across the chest and neck, kinda wrapping you in quiet confidence without any bulk. Those blue jeans underneath, faded just enough at the thighs with a straight cut that skims without squeezing, hit right at the ankle over suede chelsea boots in a muted taupe. Boots like that ground everything, soft leather giving a nod to dressier days but still easy to slip into.
What pulls it off is how the sweater’s slim sleeves balance the jeans’ casual weight, creating shape where you might not expect it, shoulders looking broader somehow, legs longer too from that boot height. I doubted turtlenecks for guys back when I styled my brother for job interviews, thought they’d choke the vibe, but nope, this setup shifts everything toward intentional without screaming for attention. You could layer a jacket later if needed, or just head out as is, feeling solid.
The color play stays subtle, grey against blue denim keeping it versatile for whatever, and that pocket hand tuck? Adds relaxed poise right there.
Light Shirt and Distressed Jeans with Sandals

See that pale button-up shirt hugging his shoulders just so, short sleeves rolled? No, they’re already short, fabric looks like breathable cotton or linen mix, super light almost white with a hint of gray wash that picks up on the jeans without clashing. It falls loose over the torso, one side tucked casual into the waistband, creating this easy drape that flatters broader builds by skimming instead of pulling tight, you know how some shirts bunch up awkwardly but this one stays smooth even when seated. Makes you think, why don’t more guys reach for these neutrals they pair so well with denim.
The jeans steal a bit of the show here though, medium blue with those intentional rips at the knees and thighs, faded overall for that lived-in feel, but cut straight leg slim enough to show shape without squeezing. They sit low on the hips, letting the shirt edge play off the denim texture, and rolled cuffs? Nah, just natural break over the ankles, which opens up the look to those leather sandals, brown straps crossing simple and sturdy. What works best is how the distress adds edge to the soft shirt up top, balancing polish with rough, keeps it from looking sloppy on taller frames especially. I second-guess my own casual days sometimes, piling on too much, but outfits like this prove less fiddling around equals more pull-together.
Sandals ground it all, open design shows off feet without socks screaming vacation, leather aged just right to match the jeans’ wear. Whole thing reads weekend ready yet sharp enough for grabbing coffee unplanned.
Casual Gray Hoodie and Blue Jeans

This gray hoodie drapes easy over the torso you know that soft cotton blend feel probably super comfy for all day wear and those blue jeans slim down from the thigh hitting just right at the ankle rolled up a bit showing off the white Converse high tops scuffed up in that lived in way. Why does the gray work so well against the blue? It tones everything neutral lets the jeans pop without screaming for attention and honestly broadens your frame up top making the whole proportion feel balanced even if you’re doubting your casual game that day. The sleeves pushed back casual like you’re heading to grab coffee or whatever.
Switch to the jeans though they got this faded wash medium blue not too dark not too light and tapered enough to keep legs looking straight not baggy which is key for that intentional laid back thing we’re after here. Footwear seals it those chunky white sneakers ground the outfit add height without trying and contrast sharp against the denim. Kinda wish I pulled this off back when I was experimenting with guy friends closets in my twenties felt too basic then now see the quiet smartness in it.
One thing the hood left down frames your face nice softens the jawline pulls eyes up before dropping to the jeans flow. Fragmented styling but pulls together yeah?
Polo Shirt and Cropped Jeans

Look at this guy rocking a pale blue short-sleeve polo that fits just right across the shoulders, not too tight but hugging enough to show some shape up top. The jeans are this faded light wash, slim through the leg and cropped right above the ankle, kinda pooling a bit at the hem which makes the whole thing feel relaxed without slopping over. Those dark loafers pull it together, smooth leather ones that slip on easy, and honestly, that’s what sells the intentional part here. You pull on jeans like that, pair with a polo in a matching cool tone, and suddenly you’re dressed up for grabbing coffee or heading to a backyard thing, no effort wasted.
What gets me is how the light colors keep everything airy, especially on a frame like his with some muscle but not bulky, it slims the legs visually you know? I mean, cropped denim can go wrong if it’s baggy, but these hug without squeezing, letting your calves breathe. Throw in loafers instead of sneakers and boom, it’s polished casual. Back when I was styling looks for my brother’s engagement party, he tried something similar and swore by it for not feeling stuffy, changed my mind on polos forever they were always too dad-like before that.
The polo’s collar pops open at the top button, casual vibe strong, and those jeans have just enough wear to look lived-in. Perfect for you if you’re building outfits around basics that transition spots. Wait, do the loafers make it? Yeah, they do, ground the slim silhouette without socks even. Flattering on most builds really, draws the eye down smooth.
Plaid Flannel Shirt with Blue Jeans

Look how this red plaid flannel hangs open over a plain gray tee, kinda softening the whole setup without trying too hard. The jeans are that medium blue wash, straight through the leg but with enough ease you can move around the office or grab lunch no problem. Brown sneakers ground it all, scuffed just right for real life wear. What pulls this together though is the pattern play, the check against solid gray and faded denim, it adds that bit of direction so you don’t just fade into cubicle gray.
I mean, lean into this for days when you want comfortable but sharp, the open shirt breaks up your torso visually, makes the shoulders pop without bulk. Jeans like these hit mid-calf on the lean, show off the shoe color too. Once had a phase where I thought flannel was only for weekends, but nah, this proves it transitions smooth, even doubting myself back then I’d steal this for my guy friends now. Footwear choice seals it, those sneakers echo the casual earth tones running through.
Stack notebooks on your desk or not, outfit stands alone. Flattering on average builds cause nothing clings wrong, layers breathe. You pull it off easy.
Striped Shirt and Vest Layered with Jeans

Look how that quilted gray vest drapes easy over the striped short-sleeve shirt, you know the kind with those crisp white and navy lines running horizontal, classic breton style but sleeveless underneath so arms stay free. Jeans are straight-leg blue denim, faded just enough at the knees to feel lived-in without trying too hard, tucked into low brown leather boots that ground the whole thing. I always think layering like this pulls your eye up from the casual bottom half, makes the torso look structured even on a relaxed day, right? It’s smart because the vest adds subtle padding at shoulders, kinda broadens without bulk, perfect when you want to lean against a railing or whatever and still read put-together.
The shirt’s cotton feels soft against skin I bet, breathable for warmer spots, and those stripes? They repeat vertically with the vest’s quilting pattern, creates this unintentional rhythm that ties everything. Jeans hug mid-thigh then relax down leg, shows off shoe detail too, those boots with the slight heel lift posture a bit. What works here is the proportion play, top half textured and fitted loose, bottom simple wash, balances so you don’t look sloppy. Me, I once layered wrong on a guy friend, vest too puffy, drowned him, but this? Nails the scale every time, wait no, doesn’t drown at all.
Short vest hem stops smart at waistband, no bunching over belt, lets denim do its thing. Colors neutral too, grays blues browns, mix with anything later. You pull this off, feels intentional stylish without fuss, trust.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What if my jeans feel a bit too loose around the waist? A: Tuck in your shirt or grab a thin leather belt to cinch them right at your natural waist. This pulls everything together without screaming “try-hard.” Roll the cuffs once for that clean, effortless vibe.
Q: Can these outfits work for guys who aren’t skinny? A: Go for straight-leg jeans instead of super slim ones. They skim your frame nicely and pair great with untucked button-ups or henleys. Layer a casual jacket over top to balance proportions.
Q: How do I keep the look sharp in cooler months? A: Throw on a chunky knit sweater and swap sneakers for leather Chelsea boots. And scarf it lightly if the wind picks up. You’ll stay cozy but still hit that intentional style mark.
Q: Do faded or distressed jeans ruin the laid-back polish? A: Not at all. Pick ones with subtle rips near the knee only. Balance them with crisp white sneakers and a fitted tee. That contrast keeps things fresh.

