I've been thinking about the tailoring on the TVA boiler suit (jumpsuit?) Loki gets stuffed into in the first episode.
Ok, so denuded Loki was a bit gratuitous (but fun).
I've really got to hand it to the costumers because the boiler suit is Extremely Well Tailored to Look "bad" but actually fits Mister Hiddles quite well. The shoulders are wider than necessary to have the sleeve seams fall past the point of the shoulder (one sign of a bad fit) but the armscye is relatively small to improve mobility. (A smaller armscye can give a garment way more mobility than a large one because it doesn't have as much fabric around the arm to pull out of shape.) I'm not sure what the thinking was about the collar. Without the collar the top wouldn't look out of place on a surgeon. The collar itself points to him possibly wearing an undershirt, as a lot of people who wear boiler suits do. The points are an acceptable length and width for current fashion (though there hasn't been a lot of change since the really long ones faded out in the early 80's) and the whole getup looks rumpled, like you'd expect of clothes of little value.
The key part of the boiler suit's tailoring is that it only looks big and baggy on him, and in most scenes where he's standing up it literally hangs off the widest (and furthest forward) point of his chest, it hangs that way practically down' to his knees. Those symmetrical folds as he turns his torso in the 2nd gif? That's precision tailoring right there, because there's enough fabric that it doesn't pull close to the front of his body from chest to knees. I have almost nothing to say about the backside of the garment because it looked about like I expected it to, I guess. But the front looked weird.
And if you're wondering, perhaps, why this level of precision tailoring shows up on that particular costume, well then the answer is probably somewhere in the line item budget for the first Thor movie, specifically for a CGI modesty panel that had to be added in post to hide Mr. Hiddleston's (not so little) Little Loki.
And making a costume to do that, my friends, is High Wizardry Precision Tailoring, and it must be properly appreciated.