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Preguntas frecuentes

  • Yes, consistently across Latin American dress codes. A long sleeve guayabera is the accepted equivalent of a dress shirt at evening weddings, church ceremonies, and indoor formal events, while short sleeve versions belong to daytime and outdoor settings. If an invitation is ambiguous, long sleeve is the safe choice: sleeves can be worn down through the ceremony and read polished in every photo.
  • French cuffs are the formal cuff standard borrowed from dress shirts: a folded-back cuff closed with cufflinks instead of buttons. On a linen guayabera they mark the shirt as wedding-grade, giving grooms and fathers of the bride a detail that photographs like black tie while the linen keeps them comfortable outdoors. Simple silver or mother-of-pearl cufflinks suit the fabric best.
  • The simpler pleated styles do. A tonal-pleat long sleeve guayabera with the sleeves rolled once works for dinners, cocktail hours, and evenings out without reading like occasion wear. The French cuff and heavily embroidered pieces are harder to dress down and are best saved for the events they were built for.
  • Steam it on a hanger the morning of the event and travel with it in a garment bag rather than folded. Linen holds a pressed look for hours once steamed, and the pleated construction disguises the light creasing that develops while seated. A five-minute tumble with a damp towel restores the finish between wears without ironing.