His biography doesn’t tell us that information.
He was known for wearing white suits out of season, though not as often as the reporters of the time would have you believe.
Mark Twain chose to wear an all-white suit because it was the fashion of the time, and he found it comfortable and practical in the hot summer months. He once mentioned that the suit allowed him to stand out in a crowd and be easily recognizable.
his shoes tended to match his suit they were usually white dress shoes at least they were later in life.
To quote him on the subject: "What can be more depressing than the somber black which custom requires men to wear upon state occasions? A group of men in evening clothes looks like a flock of crows and is just about as inspiring." Mark Twain was simply being defiant in his old age to what he felt was the stuffy traditional dress of the upper class.
I have a large (about 20''x20''), late 19th century, photograph of a man in a white suit, standing in a small skiff with a boy, and another man fishing. The standing man looks a lot like mark twain. The skiff is on the tiber in front of the castle of st. Angelo with st. Peters in the distance. I bought the framed photo in 1975 from a small flea market in georgetown, washington, d.c. I've always wondered if it really was mark twain.
The White Suit was created in 1999.
The Man in the White Suit was created in 1951.
The Riddler has a qustion mark on his costume .
Shoot to thrill
white
Be more specific, there are many different alterations that can be performed on a suit.
'Suit' can be used as either a noun e.g. "He had an Armani suit on" or as a verb e.g. "This dress will suit her well".