Rose Callahan Photography
Essayist, barman and former editor-in-chief of Japanese Playboy magazine Katsuhiko Shimaji is photographed here in his home in Tokyo, surrounded by his whiskey collection.
Rose Callahan Photography
Writer Nathaniel Adams and photographer Rose Callahan have released "We Are Dandy: The Elegant Gentleman around the World."
Courtesy Rose Callahan, Copyright Gestalten 2016
Baron Ambrosia (born Justin Fornal) hosts The Bronx Pipe Smoking Society Small Game Dinner, among other endeavors.
Courtesy Rose Callahan, Copyright Gestalten 2016
Adams and Callahan profiled men from more than a dozen countries. Here, tattoo artist and set and costume designer Gian Maurizio Fercioni is photographed in his home in Milan.

"Elegance is like spaghetti." he told Adams. "Spaghetti pomodoro is simple. But if you make it with the best ingredients it becomes elegant."
Courtesy Rose Callahan, Copyright Gestalten 2016
Takanori Nakamura is a journalist and television host with a penchant for cigars, kendo and bonsai. He's also chairman of the Japanese branch of the World's 50 Best Restaurants committee, and a goodwill ambassador between Norway and Japan.
Courtesy Rose Callahan, Copyright Gestalten 2016
At 18, Yoshio Suyama moved from his village to Tokyo to study barbering. Becoming licensed can take three to 10 years of training.
Courtesy Rose Callahan, Copyright Gestalten 2016
Initially inspired by menswear in London, Luca Lanzoni was hesitant to to adopt a dandyish look back in Italy.

"Italy is damned closed," he tells Adams in the book. "We're not open-minded. Italian menswear is the best in the world, but only if you dress in the classic way."
Courtesy Rose Callahan, Copyright Gestalten 2016
A great celebrator of excess, Aymeric Bergada Du Cadet is an art director living in Paris.

"It's not so much about 'too much' as it is about intention." he declares in the book. "The advantage of this type of clothing is that even if the city is ugly, you don't notice it."
Courtesy Rose Callahan, Copyright Gestalten 2016
Tie designer Shaun Gordon became hooked on menswear in college, when he cut off his dreadlocks and sold his casual clothing to make way for a new dandyish wardrobe.

"The reason I hadn't dressed smart or had a mustache was because I didn't have the confidence," he tells Adams. "Now I'm just going to exist and if you love me, great, and if you hate me, fine."
Rose Callahan Photography
Dandies are men who place particular importance on their physical appearance and clothing.
"We Are Dandy: The Elegant Gentleman around the World," published by Gestalten, is out now.

Editor’s Note: Dita Von Teese is a burlesque performer, model and author. This is an edited excerpt from “We Are Dandy: The Elegant Gentleman around the World,” published by Gestalten.

CNN  — 

Call them swells, fops, boulevardiers, bon vivants, men about town. But do not for a minute dismiss dandies as layabouts.

It involves great diligence and consideration to pull this off day after day. To be a dandy at the level that these men practice is nothing short of an art form. One cannot achieve this height of style without intelligence and purpose behind it.

These men are transgressing against contemporary life: they are time travelers cherry-picking embellishments and essentials from another epoch or three, tripping past periods fantastic on a journey to a more authentic self. I know all about this from my own experience.

I also know it takes bravery to dress like this, to go out in the world and be repeatedly asked by strangers “What’s the occasion?”; to be catcalled “Wake up, it ain’t 1950!”; or to hear whispers behind my back (some even accusing me of posing as Dita Von Teese!)

Rose Callahan Photography
Defustel Ndjoko photographed in New York

I empathize with the boldness and commitment to the life and style these rare birds dubbed dandies have devoted themselves to sharing with the world – whether that world is receptive or not.

Appearance is not always about being accepted or embraced. Something deeper is materializing. The reasons are as varied as there are fingerprints, of course, and, possibly no more so when it comes to the eccentric creature.

Given the circumstances so many of the men here are facing, their triumphs reveal how genuinely comfortable they are with their body and spirit, with their place in this world, with all its sticks and stones.

It’s not always easy to live on your own terms. I know this, too. But it would hurt more to spend our time compromising our ideals, our dreams, and our integrity.

Courtesy Rose Callahan, Copyright Gestalten 2016
Luca Lanzoni photographed near Milan, Italy

These individuals don’t expend energies wishing they could look like other men. So they might covet a trinket brandished by another dandy. In this case, coveting is not the same as imitation, and who can blame an aesthete who collects? Certainly, not me.

They navigate, even survive, life by way of their creative gifts, their intelligence and, more often than not, a generosity of spirit.

Dandyism is not about a trust fund. It’s about privilege, alright – but one of insight, effort, tenacity … style.

Take heed in the well-said wisdom expressed by one of the well-dressed gents in this volume, that of Loux the Vintage Guru of Nambia:

“You can sleep in a shack; you can sleep under a bridge – but you can still look smart.”

Words to live by! Now go out and live.

“We Are Dandy: The Elegant Gentleman around the World,” published by Gestalten, is out now.