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#1 2008-07-19 23:26:46

katon
Member
Posts: 363

L.L. Bean style

Last edited by katon (2008-07-20 00:47:56)

 

#2 2008-07-20 00:03:55

Horace
Member
Posts: 6433

Re: L.L. Bean style

Capital chum.   I remember the ol' catalog covers.  Coffee table and all that. 

Cheerio,

H


""This is probably the last Deb season...because of the stock market, the economy, Everything..." - W. Stillman.

 

#3 2008-07-20 01:39:00

Taylor McIntyre
Son of Ivy...
Posts: 342

Re: L.L. Bean style

More nice Beanery from HTJ:

http://heavytweedjackets.blogspot.com/2008/07/ll-bean-in-news.html

 

#4 2008-07-20 06:45:55

shuman
Member
Posts: 184

Re: L.L. Bean style

In my mind, this look is a major presence in the "New England" version of Ivy that is also being discussed. Not so in the Southern version, which seems to incorporate far more the "Bass Pro Shops" version of Preppy attire. Nothing wrong with either one, just different takes on the same influences. Woodsy Ivy?

 

#5 2008-07-20 12:12:14

captainpreppy
Member
Posts: 1536

Re: L.L. Bean style

As I remember the Bean catalogs of 50+ years ago, most of their merchandize was strictly outdoor gear. What clothing they had was strictly and purely outdoor/rural wear. I don't remember any dressy sportswear back then.

A number of companies seem to evolve from purveyors of outdoor wear and sporting goods to primarily merchandizing sportswear: Eddie Bauer, Timberland and Banana Republic all had similar evolutions. Abercrombie didn't so much evolve as it was completely re-invented between its second and third incarnations.

 

#6 2008-07-20 18:10:46

Kent Dorfman
Member
Posts: 32

Re: L.L. Bean style


Oh boy, this is great!

 

#7 2008-07-20 18:15:57

shuman
Member
Posts: 184

Re: L.L. Bean style

 

#8 2008-07-21 05:36:14

Matt
Ivy Original.
Posts: 332

Re: L.L. Bean style

It's hard to overstate what the OPH did to or for LLB in the early 80s. Prior to that time, it was a fairly niche type source for hunters, etc.

After Burnbach came out with OPH in @1980, the following items began to fly out the door, and many remain part of the Ivy scene, today;

Norwegian checked fisherman sweaters ( Tried to bring back one this year, to no avail. Purists have a lively trade on Ebay for the real thing.)
Chamois shirts
Gum sole boots
Blucher mocs
etc.

And a lot of other stuff that I can't remember. All of these items went  to people that were defined by the OPH, and were a different crowd from the original LLB customers.

BTW, women give each other books at birthday luncheons, at this point in life. My wife had a birthday luncheon last week. Someone gave her "the official FILTHY RICH H.A.N.D.B.O.O.K (How the Other .0001% Lives)" by Christopher Tennant .

The only relevance to this thread is that he copied the format of the OPH, down to the most minute detail. If you are interested, tintin has a section on it in his blog.

It is amazing that OPH is still a factor a quarter of a century later, and thus back to LLB, in an attempt to veer back to the subject.

 

#9 2008-07-21 23:34:50

katon
Member
Posts: 363

Re: L.L. Bean style

Last edited by katon (2008-07-21 23:43:58)

 

#10 2008-07-21 23:49:27

katon
Member
Posts: 363

Re: L.L. Bean style

A (complete?) scan of the clothing portion from the Fall 1933 catalog:

http://web.mac.com/scotrace/Site_2/LL_Bean.html

Last edited by katon (2008-07-21 23:54:56)

 

#11 2008-07-22 00:57:01

Taylor McIntyre
Son of Ivy...
Posts: 342

Re: L.L. Bean style

^ Those are great finds Mr. Katon - Thank you.

'Woodsy' I think Mr. Shuman called the Bean look above, which I think is the perfect word for this aspect of the classic American look. I love it.

Here's an offering from our mate Mr. Jesmond on a similar theme:

http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates/links/link.jsp;jsessionid=DLEG0ZY2KT0N1LAQBBICCOFMCAEFCIWE?id=0058967902960a&type=product&cmCat=SEARCH_RESULTS_NYR&returnPage=search-results2.jsp&Ne=2510&noImage=0&Ntt=flannel&Ntk=Products&QueryText=flannel&Ntx=matchall&N=2911&trueNum=48&nyr=1&_requestid=30723&_requestid=1209

Rugged. Outdoorsy. Woodsy.

 

#12 2008-07-22 07:26:07

jesmond
Ivy Genius
From: Wry Lane
Posts: 1202

Re: L.L. Bean style

 

#13 2008-11-03 17:30:31

Marc Grayson
Member
Posts: 8860

Re: L.L. Bean style


"‘The sense of being perfectly well dressed gives a feeling of inner tranquility which even religion is powerless to bestow." Ralph Waldo Emerson
"Looking good and dressing well is a necessity. Having a purpose in life is not."  Oscar Wilde

 

#14 2008-11-03 20:00:32

tom22
Member
Posts: 295

Re: L.L. Bean style

I always have enjoyed a visit to Bean's but I know the story.They could have saved the footwear industry in Maine if they had tried. They could have saved Hathaway shirts. In the last fifteen years they tried to squeeze the last dime. They could have had better made products, made in the USA but their price points would have suffered. They reached for the extra dime. Maybe in the years to come, if they had nurtured the sources, they would be still selling genuine Maine products. They still have the made in Maine boots though. Why didn't they take care of the other Maine makers?
    It may well be a different world in the future. maybe the Maine shoe and shirt industries can be revived? who knows? Those people are still there. They would show up for work every day.

 

#15 2008-11-04 07:45:32

Marc Grayson
Member
Posts: 8860

Re: L.L. Bean style


"‘The sense of being perfectly well dressed gives a feeling of inner tranquility which even religion is powerless to bestow." Ralph Waldo Emerson
"Looking good and dressing well is a necessity. Having a purpose in life is not."  Oscar Wilde

 

#16 2008-11-04 07:47:30

Marc Grayson
Member
Posts: 8860

Re: L.L. Bean style


"‘The sense of being perfectly well dressed gives a feeling of inner tranquility which even religion is powerless to bestow." Ralph Waldo Emerson
"Looking good and dressing well is a necessity. Having a purpose in life is not."  Oscar Wilde

 

#17 2008-11-04 11:28:26

chetmiles
Member
Posts: 1099

Re: L.L. Bean style

Some of their newer stuff is shite - polyester shirts - ugh!

 

#18 2008-11-04 15:25:24

Marc Grayson
Member
Posts: 8860

Re: L.L. Bean style

http://atripdownsouth.blogspot.com/2008/09/perfect-fair-isle-sweater.html


"‘The sense of being perfectly well dressed gives a feeling of inner tranquility which even religion is powerless to bestow." Ralph Waldo Emerson
"Looking good and dressing well is a necessity. Having a purpose in life is not."  Oscar Wilde

 

#19 2008-11-04 16:20:02

Marc Grayson
Member
Posts: 8860

Re: L.L. Bean style

http://themoment.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/01/07/the-high-low-ll-beans-kingfield-sweater/


"‘The sense of being perfectly well dressed gives a feeling of inner tranquility which even religion is powerless to bestow." Ralph Waldo Emerson
"Looking good and dressing well is a necessity. Having a purpose in life is not."  Oscar Wilde

 

#20 2008-11-05 14:45:02

Howard
Member
From: Drimtaidhvrickhilliohattan
Posts: 236

Re: L.L. Bean style

A significant amount of old Bean was actually Bean labeled Willis & Geiger, such as khaki colored bush poplin boot trousers with red wool flannel lining and knit cuffs. W&G made similar stuff for the original A&F. This was all pre-Lands' End W&G.

 

#21 2008-11-05 14:58:18

Howard
Member
From: Drimtaidhvrickhilliohattan
Posts: 236

Re: L.L. Bean style

 

#22 2008-11-06 00:51:38

Taylor McIntyre
Son of Ivy...
Posts: 342

Re: L.L. Bean style

 

#23 2008-11-08 19:57:21

Marc Grayson
Member
Posts: 8860

Re: L.L. Bean style

http://heavytweed.blogspot.com/2008/11/25-years-ago-ll-bean-early-fall-1983.html


"‘The sense of being perfectly well dressed gives a feeling of inner tranquility which even religion is powerless to bestow." Ralph Waldo Emerson
"Looking good and dressing well is a necessity. Having a purpose in life is not."  Oscar Wilde

 

#24 2008-11-10 07:11:38

Marc Grayson
Member
Posts: 8860

Re: L.L. Bean style


"‘The sense of being perfectly well dressed gives a feeling of inner tranquility which even religion is powerless to bestow." Ralph Waldo Emerson
"Looking good and dressing well is a necessity. Having a purpose in life is not."  Oscar Wilde

 

#25 2008-11-11 04:58:59

Horace
Member
Posts: 6433

Re: L.L. Bean style

^^^those shirts, in those patterns, were great.    I'm surprised that Bean forsook them.


""This is probably the last Deb season...because of the stock market, the economy, Everything..." - W. Stillman.

 

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