Looks like the 1970's to me...but at least from a real Ivy store:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/181233502761?ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1438.l2648
I wish it was XL, these are the best sweatshirts I've had.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Made-in-USA-Mens-Vintage-L-L-Bean-Russel-Athletic-Sweatshirt-Medium-Tall-Grey-/331041417209?pt=US_CSA_MC_Sweaters&hash=item4d139b27f9
I like it Jez , tell me as you are relatively new around these parts
Are you experiencing an Ivy Indian summer or has your love of the look been constant ?
No worries either way i am just being nosey.
That's a nice jacket Jdemy. Oozing Ivy.
Was Southwick always a good company or might this be a poorer quality ancestor to the current offerings?
I'm glad everyone seems to like this coat- I have a lots of questions....but first, to answer one:
I have always been interested in Ivy clothes- but only the shirts. I used to buy from Ebay a lot- and mostly the boom years stuff- the slimmer, patterned shirts, traditional button down collars but sometimes with bold plaids and even some paisleys. No one seems to mention paisley on these pages, but I was always typing in "60's paisley" to my searches. I really like the odd combo of the "framework" of a traditional shirt holding some of those wilder designs within it. I never bought an ivy jacket before. The jackets I wore as a kid during the 60's we called "Eton" jackets- and they were lapel-less and looked like Beatles coats. Lately,I don't like the 'campus' paisleys and "cum laude" plaids...I just look for a good white shirt or a good blue shirt...going to have Kamakura make me a poplin and a Thomas Mason pinpoint.
My questions are these (about the jacket I just bought): What is a standard length for a sleeve on a 40r jacket -as I wonder if these look a bit short...? And, seeing as the seller buttoned all the buttons on this, how do I know if it is better pressed as a rolled 3/2, or, instead,buttoned as they have it in the photo? Was it always the wearers choice how to press the lapel? And if so, what instructions do I give the people at the laundry so that I can get the roll back...?
Thank you all, in advance.
I'm no expert Jdemy, but being a Southwick from 1961, it's likely intended to be a 3 roll 2, but I could be dead wrong. Often, if the jacket ever was a 3/2, you'll see a (sometimes faint) crease indicating where the 3/2 roll used to occur. Or the lapel will just sort of tend to want to roll that way. Some 3/2 roll jackets will have the button hole on the top button finished with a nicer stitching as it was to be on display when the lapel is rolled to the 2nd button or the and the corresponding button will have "invisible" stitching so you can't see the button thread and stitching through the lapel. But the other 2 buttons may be stitched all the way through. I've had success getting 3/2 roll jackets to get back in shape with gentle and persistent spot steaming and then pressing with a cloth with some weight on it, like a book or stack of records or something. Check in a day or so and then steam again if necessary. In more stubborn cases I've just taken it to my cleaner and told them to steam it so the lapels roll to the middle button and they did just that.
I think some people liked buttoning up the top button and the lapels just get out of whack. Or people store them, maybe folded, for years with all the buttons done up. I think if it was a 3/2, the lapels want to go there. They may just need some help.
Oh, and I've been known to wear paisley and some bold patterns. Much to Armchaired's chagrin I might add.
Last edited by Worried Man (2013-10-10 20:57:12)
http://www.ebay.com/itm/1960s-Vintage-GANT-THE-HUGGER-RED-TAPERED-BUTTON-DOWN-PAISLEY-SHIRT-/310766227475?pt=Vintage_Men_s_Clothing&hash=item485b1c5013
Last edited by The Woolster (2013-10-11 03:56:55)
WHOA!!!!!! Woolster! Thank you, so much. That thread is killer. I peeked into it and am saving the rest for when I get home from work...If any of you want to know what my childhood looked like...look at this thread- and especially the Coen brother's stills.