http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_wwgXxAjQedA/TKWyjJDeF8I/AAAAAAAAFu0/O_OuCK0pghc/s1600/J+press+catalog.jpg
The reference completely eluded me so far...
^ Ten years before 'Trad'!
This book is such a little gem - I've yet to see a review that 'gets' it! All those who read it & think they're talking about some kind of grand cultural manifestation of 'lost in translation' - Ha, Ha, Ha.
The book is perfect because it talks about a 'Look'. That's all it does.
All the wannabe critics talk about it as if it was something else. IT IS WHAT IT IS. It's about a certain Look.
I'm gonna knock one out called 'The Ivy Smell' that'll really kill 'em dead...
'Sanforized' will be Chapter One.
Just looking back through some Press catalogues. Nothing much I'd want to wear except maybe some desert boots.
This may be moderately controversial, I suppose.
As usual I am late to the party.
I got this stylish little book a week or so ago and have now had chance to go through it. Like most of you I enjoyed the classic ads and many of the lovely little drawings.
I enjoyed the nostalgia trip and the evocation of a style and culture that was once almost forgotten here but now seems very much on the way back.
However I found myself wondering from time to time whether some of the pictures of American men in the 50s and 60s actually helped the cause. I was reminded of the strategy employed by BMW who until quite recently never allowed any hint of a human being into their television ads. Their reasoning it seems was that they felt to include people might unhelpfully shift the focus from the car and, if the people (had they used them) had not appealed to the viewer as having the ‘right image’ the reputation of the brand could suffer!
So it is with the little book – just take a look at the picture of Paul Newman on page 15. What does that image possibly contribute?
Or the young Dustin Hoffman in his ill-fitting cord jacket on page 75….looking like the kind of kid that would, at my school, have risked a good kicking round the back of the bike sheds.
And yet words such as ‘template’, ‘irresistible’ are used to describe them.
And then there is the ongoing fascination with JFK with his too-neat hair and squinty face (still thinking about those tits?). Although the image of him on his yacht to some extent makes up for it.
And some of the ads to my eyes are rather suspect too – pages 110, 115 and 135 for example.
My comments are not intended to be harsh and no doubt reflect the fact that I came to Ivy from a mod perspective and only ever could see beauty in some select pieces. And of course the look we strove for was a long way from some of the images shown here. Sorry. BTW none of these comments apply to the super cool pic on page 157 – but that’s not really Ivy….
Despite this I do like the book and agree that it is beautifully presented. As Rip says 5***** for passion.
I am conscious that I have not responded to Rip’s invitation to reflect on Ralph Lauren in the 80s. While I did admire his stuff then, he was often described I recall as a ‘stylist’ rather than a designer. He certainly proposed a life-style that was aspirational and in many ways very beautiful. My main focus then was, however, on Italian clothing. Somehow that ‘Made in Italy’ label was very seductive to me and my wardrobe was then made up largely of Armani, Cerruti, Ferre and so on.
Nice to have different points of view. John Gall has a broad back. Anyway, the deed is done: onwards and upwards. I think something else might be in the pipeline. Like Kingstonian, you have a dispensation, young Brideshead!
I think - for the first time as far as I'm aware - the authors presented to a wider world and to an interested public the story of our style. Ground-breaking perhaps and certainly of more use to me - and more fun - than Flusser and his ilk.
I don't mind 'Ivy for everyone' - though it's unlikely to pan out in that way. Not 'everyone' (or 'everybody') can be ITK, though - otherwise you wind up with a 'Ready Steady Go' mentality - if you won't object to my saying so. I think, more realistically, Ivy will remain pretty much a minority interest, at least in the UK. It would be interesting to have some Japanese posters come on board to give their POV.
All you say is true.
My (rather minor) point was that the way to sell Ivy to the US remains to insist that it's for nobody but an, by now almost mythic, elite.
Last edited by Russell_Street (2010-11-17 11:54:43)
The 'mythic elite' idea may appeal to some in the US. I hope we here in the UK keep our feet on the ground. It would be interesting to know how such a book would have turned out had Americans put it together.
... And what generation of Americans put it together & from which backgrounds.
The lower down the American social scale & the further from New England you go the more important it is that Ivy be "Elite"!
If online America has taught us anything then it's that.
The big wide world on the other hand is... well, just bigger & wider!
^ Boy are you in trouble.
Last edited by Big Tony (2010-11-17 15:39:27)
"wouldn't change a thing" - music to the authors ears - I'll pass that on. Thanks.
The Americans are doing a book in 2012 aren't they? Exhibition on Ivy League clothing in NYC (Fashion Institute or Parsons or somewhere else). Catalogue published by Yale University Press. No doubt contributory essays from Boyer et al... I hope it's a beauty but fear it'll be a bit of a dog's dinner. Pseudo-academic waffle about fashion is nothing new, but when applied to the button-down shirt it could be execrable. Our best hope is lots of great archive material and not so much on the contemporary 'revival' (ha! no signs of the return of the natural shoulder on my travels!) a la J.Crew, Jack Wills and that sort of shoddy nonsense.
The second paragraph - added to Patrick's words - make me feel all 'anti-intellectual'.
Got my copy today and will comment later.
We await your remarks in our accustomed reverent silence.
For those that are interested, I've just heard on the radio that Graham Marsh will be on the Robert Elms show on BBC London Radio on monday, sometime between 12 and 3, talking about 'The Ivy Look'