Looking good in some fine attire (4)
I believe the answer is:
neat
'looking good' is the definition.
'neat' can be an answer for 'good' (I've seen this before). I am not sure about the 'looking' bit.
'in some fine attire' is the wordplay.
'in' indicates a hidden word.
'NEAT' is hidden within 'some fine attire'.
Can you help me to learn more?
(Other definitions for neat that I've seen before include "lacking water" , "farm animals" , "Well-trimmed" , "cow maybe" , "Tidy - undiluted" .)