AMC's Mad Men boasts one of the most striking, coherent artistic visions on television, thanks in large part to the rigorous creative control of its showrunner, Matthew Weiner. But the sleek '60s aesthetic we're all so familiar with wouldn't be the same without the show's outstanding wardrobe—an array of slim, tailored suits and eye-catching statement pieces, assembled by one of the best costume designers working now, Janie Bryant. As Mad Men enters the second half of its seventh and final season, we look back at the twenty best menswear looks in the history of the series.

20. Stan's Tie

Stan is the creative team's perennial stoner, joker, and anything but professional, which means he only wears a suit when he has to—and as he proves with this (awesomely) ridiculous blazer and tie combo, even when he has to he'll dress up in the way only he can. Taking the psychedelic '60s to the office: we can dig it.

19. Don's Turtleneck

Don Draper is the last man on earth you'd associate with the laid-back cosmopolitan chic of a turtleneck, but you can't deny the results: paired with this patterned sport coat it's ideal for a night on the town.

18. Don's Casual Yellow Blazer

Whenever Don ventured outside of Manhattan there was a good chance he'd ditch the usual office attire and slip into something more suitably low-key, and this killer yellow blazer is no exception. A relic of the era that falls just on the other side of tacky.

17. Roger's Dandy Scarf

Roger Sterling is rarely seen accessorizing, but this excellent cherry-red scarf presents a strong case that he ought to do so more often. The blazing color is set against the usual backdrop of gray, black, and blue which makes it stand out in the best possible way.

16. Ted's Olive Suit

Typically the most basic dresser of the Sterling-Cooper executives, Ted has exactly one great outfit to his name: a tasteful olive-green suit in a very thick wool, the perfect contrast to the overwhelming blue-grey palette dominant among his colleagues.

15. Lane's British Three-Piece

Before poor émigré Lane Pryce met his tragic demise he had occasion to wear a great many suits in the classic English style, like this distinguished three-piece—a sophisticated look further improved by the impeccable color combo.

14. Don's Polo-Blazer Combo

Don Draper in short sleeves? Madness. So of course the only time he was seen wearing a polo shirt he quickly worked it into a summer suit, mastering a (then unheard-of) casual menswear look that's recently become a must-wear trend.

13. Don's Dress Shirt and Sweater

A weekend at the office brought the team in at their most relaxed—including Pete Campbell in a polo sweater and shorts, the less said about which the better—and the best of the lot, unsurprisingly, is Don's dress shirt and sweater combo, sleeves rolled up just right with the ideal pants to match.

12. Ginsberg's Casual Officewear

Ginsberg has always been a youthful figure in the office—and the closest thing they have to a representative of the next generation—so it only makes sense that his casualwear should be more modern than anything else seen on the show. Here, he looks like he walked off a menswear Tumblr.

11. Cutler's Glasses

Jim Cutler always dress like a refined gentleman in the traditional Don and Roger style, but the greatest virtue of his look is the simplest: those outstanding thick-framed spectacles, which are sort of like Tom Ford meets Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.

10. Harry's Yellow Jacket

Janie Bryant told us last year that the evolution of Harry Crane's style over the course of the show's six seasons brought him from wheedling nobody to aspiring "Hollywood douchebag"—culminating in this, the boldest suit jacket in Mad Men history. Douchey? Perhaps. But undeniably head-turning.

9. Bob's Blue Suit

Say what you will about the closeted charmer and secret office impostor, but Bob will always have one thing going for him, no matter how phony his shtick is: the guy can rock a slim blue suit like nobody's business. And that tie! Pretty great, Bob.

8. Don's Tuxedo

It was in season five's great At the Codfish Ball that Mad Men whisked the executives to their proudest formal function and Don Draper got to go full James Bond, killing it here in a classic black tux that, unsurprisingly on Don, is the height of elegance.

7. Roger's Double-Breasted Blazer

When Roger and Don join Harry Crane on his home turf of Los Angeles in the middle of the fifth season, the normally monochromatic gentlemen are free to bust out their most extravagant menswear—best of all being Roger's tremendous double-breasted blue blazer, festooned with gold buttons and topped off (of course) with the perfect red cravat.

6. Don's California Jacket

"I mean Don Draper in pale blue? It's too much," Janie Bryant reflected about his California jacket in our interview with her last year. Indeed: Don's best casual look was made from scratch for him for this particular trip to Los Angeles, and the care and attention shows. (Attentive fans may have noticed that the jacket makes a second appearance seasons later when Don visits Italy.)

5. Pete's Cream Dinner Jacket

You can tell the seventies are fast approaching when the Sterling-Cooper men are turning to plaid jackets. These things caught a lot of flack when the episode first aired two years ago, but in our view Pete Campbell pulls off pale yellow so well that we're eager to see the look make a comeback—especially if it means we can have that blue and orange tie.

4. Cooper's Bow Tie

The late Bert Cooper was always the dandy of the Mad Men cast—the rakish old-world gentleman who shunned the clean lines and trim silhouettes of the sixties for a more daringly ostentatious style. The best touch? The simplest thing: his ubiquitous bowtie, an accessory that says everything you need to know about the man.

3. Pete's Blue Suit

He's drifted away from the routine in recent seasons, but through the early days of Mad Men the young Pete Campbell wore one thing and one thing only: royal-blue suits. Whether it was a subtle nod to his blue-blooded American sensibility or a transparent bid to stand out in a drab room, it's hard to argue with the result. How did such a dweeb get so stylish?

2. Don's Original Suit

Mad Men's pilot introduced us to Don Draper as a charismatic womanizer with a rare gift: a peerless command of the sales meeting. And a big part of what distinguished Don was his seemingly effortless mastery of cutting-edge '60s fashion, our first glimpse of which brought narrow lapels and skinny ties back into style virtually overnight. This suit wasn't just something a character wore. In the mind of the audience the suit was the character.

1. Roger's Three-Piece Suit

Don Draper is the inexhaustibly fascinating hero of Mad Men, and it's understandable that when most people think of the show's signature style they think first of his slim suits. But for us the show's most stylish character has always been Roger Sterling, Don's mentor and the office's philandering elder statesman. It's that gray three-piece suit: an ensemble Roger strays from so rarely that the two are now synonymous.

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