Things that fit in with The Look just because they have the right vibe -
I'll start with Paraboot. Not Ivy, not American, but they have a vibe that fits in with The Look and so they work.
Does that make sense?
The Para 'Harvard' - Zip off the label with the Stanley Knife you carry around with you everywhere ( ) -
A nice high cut.
http://www.paraboot.com/main.asp?groupID=2&topicID=1&subtopicID=1&prodID=22
Better than the Para 'Universite' I bought last year.
http://www.paraboot.com/main.asp?groupID=2&topicID=1&subtopicID=1&prodID=17
Maybe? Why not?
http://www.pediwear.co.uk/paraboot/products/2266.php
I wear the Thames. Wish I'd got these.
http://www.pediwear.co.uk/paraboot/products/2257.php
No?
And lastly - What my wife calls my 'Spack Boots':
http://www.pediwear.co.uk/paraboot/products/2255.php
I've had a pair of Avignon for some years now. I think it's a look you love or hate.
I can say they are supremely comfortable, really hard wearing and improve with age.
The Verlaine ankle boots look great. Tempted.
Definitely!
I also prefer these Avignons to the the other ones that have a sole more like the Michael... (I think I have only seen them on the pediwear site)
I love the Michael, but I'd prefer the Avignons with the flat leather soles, they're a bit like JM Weston Chasse, right? split-toe gibsons, Norwegians, whatever you call them... I don't own them... But they're on my list...
One of the oddest makes I've ever worn; including the black mocs. Thumbs down from me, I'm afraid.
Beyond Paraboot what else would you nominate purely on feeling alone?
I do like my English made Clarks chukka boots: toffee-coloured leather and very sturdy. They don't have pride of place on my shoe rack, unlike Jarman, AE or Bass, but they are a reliable stand-by, looking at their best with baggy dark green cords and a Paul Stuart Shetland crew neck sweater. I can appear at the school I work in from time to time, do a lot of walking and feel confident they'll hold together. Far superior to the current desert boot.
I think any big and heavy shoe has its place or "the vibe". It does to me, anyway. I always wished my Weejuns had double soles.
J. Keydge slack jackets - wonderful. I have two - one cord, one moleskin, just perfect.
Yes. I have a sandy-coloured linen one. "Makes you look just like a 50s jazz musician" quoth the man at 2 Russell Street...
They are truly wonderful, look just right. I recently saw some dirt cheap on a French site - available only for France. Shame, I would have bought a number of them.
Above post was referring to J. Keydge not resoling.....
Those Red Wing chukkas do qualify as well IMO : http://www.oipolloi.com/store/RedWing-WorkChukkaBootBrown-6396.html
This thread was worth a bump anyway.....
... And Ivy was always such a magpie style anyway, plundering the world for fabrics and textures to combine in its unique way. It was always expanding.
I'm in deep knitwear mode just now (Must be the weather...) and the more you look back the more you see - Surely the Ivy style has the richest options for knitwear of any style?
A plain Ragg Wool crew neck from LL Bean won out today after looking at Norwegian & Fairisle options. Very New England, very less-is-more. It's so understated that it's perfect: No big statements, just warmth, moderate weight & rugged good looks which avoid all the usual cliches of something like a Norwegian sweater.
http://reviews.llbean.com/1138/IG93171/reviews.htm
Not a sweater you'll find in the OPH.