Chinos. Khakis. Though they've been ridiculed and somewhat ruined by the business casual culture of America, I still find myself searching for the perfect pair (for me). Not the most Trad pair, but the perfect pair. Here's what I remember: Duck Head. As a kid of the South, they are all I remember owning. I never had Bean or Brooks or LE. I didn't know a kid (I may not remember now anyway) who owned anything but Duck Head. You could buy them at Sears. Penney's. Goody's. Upscale menswear shops like M.S. McClellan (a give-away as to my locale) even carried them. Looking at myself in them in old pictures, they were slimish in cut, on seam pockets, one button-through back pocket and literally came in any color you could imagine. I had the standard khaki, but also had them in buttery yellow, ocean blue, etc.
Now, as a 30 year old, I find myself relentlessly on this search. I seem to really be drawn to original military models (like Buzz Rickson). I suppose this is because I come from a family of military men and I fell a connection to that heritage. I've tried most brands out there. Bills are too big everywhere, but they have the fabric down pretty well. Polo used to make a good GI chino, but they're crap now. Bean models are blah, and most are non-iron. The closest I've found yet is the J. Crew Essential chino in the Classic (re: slim) cut. I like them, yet find myself still looking...
What makes a perfect pair for you? Are on-seam pockets a necessity or do you care? What about the watch pocket? Heavy cloth or light?
What were the original military chinos like? Did they have a button fly or zip? J. Crew is selling this model, claiming they are a copy of the 1930s model military chino. Is that accurate?
http://www.jcrew.com/AST/Browse/MensBrowse/Men_Shop_By_Category/pants/chino/PRDOVR~86722/86722.jsp
Stories/memories would probably be really good as well.
I came from a military family as well. When my older brother returned from overseas in the early 80's, i remember his drab buttonfly, full cut chinos. I remember wearing the piss out of those, along with an RL Big Oxford, the kind no longer made, with the extra full cut, and the pony on the shirt tail. Ahhh, memories....
For me, I like the full cut of the Bills M1, like buttonfly(maybe nostalgia), so the Bills M1 buttonfly has been it for me, but I prefer the harder, original fabric of the older Bills that I used to own. I wish you could still find those unwashed versions...
My favorite pair of khakis were from the company British Khaki, which also made a nice safari jacket. Unfortunately, they have since left the apparel business.
Random Khaki musings:
I've had a couple pair of WWII khakis I bought at surplus shops. They're great if you like 'em baggy. They also have eccentric little details like the watch pocket and peculiar front pocket construction. I have a pair of the Ralph Lauren repros now, and I'd rate them at about 90-95% accurate. The buttons are close, but not perfect. I also have a later pair of 100% cotton military khakis with a zipper. The Army and Air Force abandoned khaki uniforms shortly after the Vietnam era, to my knowledge.
I looked at the J. Crew site, and the "1930s khakis" didn't look right to me. But I wasn't around in the '30s.
When I was on active duty in the Navy in the early '80s I wore plain old Dickies for shipboard wear. I got mine at K-Mart. They held up better to the laundry manglers than the "wash khakis" from the Navy Uniform Shop.
JOA - I don't think McClellans ever sold Duck Heads. You may be thinking of McMillan Clothing. I recall them first on Chapman Highway, and then on Cumberland. Funny, I just saw Bob McClellan just a few minutes ago. I was buying gas , and he was buying cigs. I could have asked him.
Duck heads were fine in 1980 when they were still manufactured as "work wear", but went steadily downhill when the company was sold. The last pair I had were incredibly thin.
I'm trying out a pair of BB no-iron khakis as I write this. The Hudson cut. The thinner cut was just too uncomfortable for me, and I'm no fatty by any stretch. The no-iron finish and taper below the knee make cuffing problematic, but not impossible. Pretty good for biz cas, I think. Bills M2s are better for loafing.
Great observations, all.
The 30's cut is less full than the WWII cut isn't it? Interesting.
As Tony Ventresca has pointed out the Ivy Boom years are actually post Korea, not post WWII. The Boom years cut was a slimmer fit.
Baggy, one size too large, etc. the OPH says in 1980. That seems to be the 'Trad' way today too on AAAT.
I don't know...
Pick your era & pick your fit. Chinos have come in so many different cuts over time. Turn-ups have come & gone & come again. Pleats have featured. My favourite old Duck Heads have metal D-Ring side adjusters...
I used to like the Halrin Chinos from J.Simons back when you could get them & Duck Head in the 80's was great too as Kent says. Today I just shop around not being dogmatically tied to any fixed idea of how a Chino should be cut. I have the Bills M1 & M2, but haven't been enthused enough to investigate the M3 yet. Cherokee the US workwear brand sometimes has a nice cut offered (they change everytime I see them) and they don't cost anything. I like LL Bean's too...
Cheers -
Consider me the unofficial archivist of the Inner Circle.
Photos of 1940s issue chinos, courtesy of www.americanvintageclassics.com
http://www.americanvintageclassics.com/picsr/rp5163a.jpg
http://www.americanvintageclassics.com/picsr/rp5163b.jpg
http://www.americanvintageclassics.com/picsr/rp5163c.jpg
How do you pronounce "khaki"? My father says it as "car-key".
I am gullible to world of the Mad Men. I remember in the 80s the Gap stores did stunning black and white photo ads in magazines that said John Wayne wore Khakis or Zsa Zsa Gabor wore khakis. The ads were stunning. Mid 80s maybe. The style was reborn. and it was a decent style echoing the fashions of WWII.
But I think I am accurate about the history. The GAP reinvented khakis in the 1980s. They made the style popular.
http://www.aeroleatherclothing.com/webapp/aeroleather/servlet/AeroViewPage?page=displayproduct&subcatid=120&prodid=467
No-one wears them where l come from, but they do seem to look o.k. My town has an obsession with black.
Last edited by The_Shooman (2008-07-04 20:04:31)
Last edited by eg (2008-07-04 20:54:46)
I wonder if the Duck Head khakis whose passing the OP laments were regionally distributed. I am well over twice his age and have no recollection of them whatsoever.
It may be a reflection of Cruiser-esque philistinism on my part, but I am quite partial to Target's khakis. I am sporting a pair of their "Legendary Golds" at the moment for which I paid the princely sum of $11 or so. I like to fancy I look pretty decent in them. Hope I am not merely deluding myself!
Thanks, Howard. Good info.
Cap'n Prep--Duck Head may have been regional. I can remember visiting family in Indiana during the summers and they never had them in stores up there, so it's possible.
What the fuck is happening here- this is a thread straight from AAAT- " are these Khakis trad" etc - and so we come full circle.
Now what would make this thread really intresting- would be photographs of femail porn stars releasing a cock from a pair of Khakis as she is about to perform fellatio- over to you big Tony
Last edited by Cheeky Monkey (2008-07-05 06:38:04)
My preferred chinos are Bill's and the Andover Shop. I wear them rather high-rise, and cuffed-usually with pleats.
To OP's question, the perfect khakis for me are cheap. That's the prime factor. I've had some Bill's. They're great trou that are very well made. Trouble is, I don't need my khakis to be that well made. Over-engineered. The things are interchangeable with jeans for me, and I don't spend much on those, either. They're casual, beater pants. Why spend a lot of money on clothes that are perpetually one glass of red wine away from gardening gear?
Generally, whatever's cheap on Land's End Overstocks will do just fine. If I had my ruthers, the material would be a bit heavier rather than lighter and I like a trimmer fit through the hips. Got some Vintage Chinos (or some such name) from LE on the cheap several years ago that pegged it right.
See, I think this is what I"m beginning to think AQG. I started off buying high (Bills) but have come way down in terms of price.
Cheekey Monkey--this is hardly a Trad thread. If it were, someone would quickly drop a Bills bomb and the thread would lock itself. I'm curious about what makes a really good chino in general for each of us. I tend to agree with AQG in that I like a heavier material with a trim fit but, as of yet, haven't found it.
Primark sold cheap chinos with buttons - four quid a pair.
Twice the trouble when you take a leak - avoiding splashes AND adjusting your dress.