Absolutely the direction I would go in - Pure Class, Chris !
Not too sure what the 'context of the UK' might be. It makes sense to me that they originate in the USA as the hot weather equivalent of a tweed jacket.
Jackets in the UK are interesting - Always subdued, unless you are wearing a silly Henley Blazer...
Madras shirts can be as wild as you like. Try the same with a jacket & you'll be a clown over here.
Last edited by Liam Mac (2012-04-16 05:13:47)
I think that makes great sense. There is a balance there. Teaming it with neutrals makes a lot of sense too.
... Pink Critter Pants would be a mistake.
Yes. Absolutely. The madras is always the stand out piece and everything else should know its place. That's not to say that other things should be bland. The 5 pockets and tie work for their textures, the tie also for the richness and darkness of it's colour and the shirt for it's crispness and it's super clean glow. The shoes we can only speculate on but I like to imagine some kind of burgundy loafer. That would be a no brainer really.
That's a great jacket but I bet that's not a vintage.
Yeah too true, I'm sure it's probably from a Japanese store. From what I dredged up on the Japanese Ivy thread it's clear that many brands are still making the good stuff there. Lucky gits.
Last edited by Liam Mac (2012-04-16 06:30:52)
... And yet I would happily wear a GFY* Madras Jacket on the Cape with a Navy Polo & White Levis...
*GFY... GTH, and then some !
Cheeky bit of grape in there.
Last edited by Oo Bop Sh'bam (2012-04-20 11:31:03)
Last edited by Liam Mac (2012-05-05 17:42:20)
http://www.etsy.com/listing/70867846/vintage-1950s-mens-madras-plaid-jacket?ref=sr_gallery_14&ga_search_query=madras&ga_view_type=gallery&ga_ship_to=ZZ&ga_min=0&ga_max=0&ga_order=date_desc&ga_page=3&ga_search_type=vintage&ga_facet=vintagemadras
Overpriced and badly photographed. I love the colours though and would be a great slouchy type sling on madras jacket for when it's hot hot hot.
Do you get loyalty points for that ....lol !!
Hahahahaha, i don't actually shop in supermarkets, buy all my food from local markets. But I might ask!!
When you shop in Waitrose you get a little green token for the charity box, I currently am funding the skate park project and something for stroke victims, thing is I don't know what a green token equates to.
I'm funding the 'Skate Parks for Stroke Victims' project, personally. Seems like a much for interesting proposal.
Of course that's a lie I do all my shopping at Home Bargains. Their bags are so flimsy that they couldn't even choke a seagull properly. That's pretty eco-friendly in my book.