http://lookatmyfuckingredtrousers.blogspot.nl/
sensing a lot of underlying class hate from the website .. red trousers, usually cords, once being the preserve of the Sloane ranger crowd and now morphed into the Mayfair/West End hedge fund manager on a Friday lunchtime look, is one of the last strong signifiers of class and background in the UK. I sense this website is attacking this display hoping no doubt to stamp it out so every bloke only sports jeans and perhaps beige chinos once in a while. twat.
disclaimer: I occasionally sport a burgundy pair of thick cords .. if some prole with a camera offers to take my photo I plan to stick my umbrella somewhere very unpleasant.
fruity
Last edited by Oldfruit1 (2013-09-28 12:34:27)
Well, I've never sported red trousers, purple yes. But I was surprised how prevalent they seem in the posh parts of the UK, I thought it was a particularly Italian affliction.
An old colleague and mucca of mine contributes to this blog, out of the blue yesterday, over cigars and Jamaican rum he called up this blog on his mobile and said this was his hobby - spotting red trousers on business trips. Each to his own, but I thought it was quite funny today when I had a look and on tedious business trips, especially in Italy, not a bad little game to play in lonely hotel lobbies whilst waiting for taxis or business associates arriving late.
Last edited by 4F Hepcat (2013-09-28 12:54:53)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-magazine-monitor-23530064
key quote which sums up the feeling from left wing liberal twats from the guardian newspaper who seem to increasingly represent the mainstream opinion of the idiotic masses in the country:
The Guardian newspaper fumed that they signify those "utterly devoid of self-awareness but wealthy in idiocy".
I don't think the guardian is worried about being devoid self awareness (if they were they should look at their own views more closely), but more concerned about those who are wealthy as they put it. a hatred for anyone who looks like they are have money, which may explain why a lot of guys who are wealthy hide in jeans and a blue button down shirt rather than stand out to be ridiculed, it also may explain why more luxurious items aren't worn very much by the wealthy, silk scarves, trilby hats, camel hair coats and so on .. any signs of wealth seem to be reduced to trinkets such as wristwatches which can perhaps be hidden when required under the sleeve.
fruity
Last edited by Oldfruit1 (2013-09-28 13:03:24)
They no longer signify a thing.
Why ?
Because they are now deliberately worn to TRY to signify something.
Not the genuinely organic origins of the style at all.
The 'Insider's Reference / Joke' is now long dead as plebs from *Wherever* ( Kingston-Upon-Thames ? ) have read about the style and copied it thinking that they too will look 'Posh'.
Think that anything in 'The Official Sloane Ranger Handbook' remained posh after publication & Daily Mail readers started to wear Barbours ?
Think that 'The Official Preppy Handbook' didn't also debase the very style that they were tongue-in-cheek celebrating ?
Class signifiers are very much like the youth subcultural signifiers of what's 'cool' - When the wrong people start doing it it's over & you move on.
That's the reality of the semiotics class.
Couldn't be truer.
In (English, Gentlemanly) class terms the list of things that are currently infra dig would make an iGent weep...
Rolexes are for awful plebs.
... ... ... ... ...
Well maybe I'm off base and as you guys say it's more a case of ostentation is frowned upon and disapproval by women of such dressing has seeped into the current zeitgeist .. but why would that be the case? Interesting stuff.
One issue which you guys raise is that these 'stylers' will move on and find something else as a style signifier once it has hit the mainstream, but how is this congruent with classic dressing? If they are forced to do this aren't they then following a fashion of a sort like a teenage girl .. instead of attempting to attain higher aesthetic value they are running from dressing like the masses or style enthusiasts aka I gents which could end in dressing terribly? This may be a little philosophical for a style website but surely there are optimum style aesthetics to aim at, so whether one man or many men wear something resembling this it makes no difference to its aesthetic value. Dressing to show your status or some other mark is something entirely different of course.
Fruity
Last edited by Oldfruit1 (2013-09-28 15:51:34)
Don't over-egg the pudding Jimi...
Gee, l never had any idea they were supposed to signify higher classes of people, how bleedin' silly. l wouldn't mind getting some nice tailored red cords, but certainly not to send any silly class messages. l want to wear red cords because l like them.
Yeah mate! The average aussie only uses glasses for very special occasions, and only then it is old vegemite glasses we get from the supermarket. Fxh will tell ya.
Here is a picture of the classic aussie vegemite glass everyone had in their Big knockers (see the 5th picture):
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/52/Vegemite_jars_timeline.jpg
When we had a fine dinner party we always brought out the vegemite glasses to add extra class to the party. And we used plastic dinner plates instead of paper ones to show how fancy we could be. Of course no-one ever wore shoes to the party, it was just singlettes and stubbie shorts mate, and always a barbie (BBQ). When we finished putting on appearances we would put the glasses away and crack open the beer stubbies and let it all hang out. The glasses were only to make an initial impression, in most houses it is plastic cups from the supermarket, or for proper blokes, beer!
Last edited by The_Shooman (2013-09-28 18:05:07)
Last edited by The_Shooman (2013-09-28 19:30:43)
I was wearing these red pants in NYC two years ago or more and many people were doing double takes. Now they are becoming common. Two years ago, it was women wearing brightly colored khakis. European mens fashion seems to get copied by American women for several seasons before it's picked up by American men. American men can be such sheep.
Our equivalent fashion quirk here is the medium to dark solid suit worn with extremely lightly colored brown lace ups. There was literally a herd of them walking up Lexington Avenue the other day.