http://www.filmnoirbuff.com/article/london-life-westend-style-part-one
Fancy a walk?
Join me on a stroll through the West End of London.
Part One will get you suited & booted for a stroll down Piccadilly.
Part Two will take you along with me where the action is!
... Maybe it's because I'm a Londoner...
t.
NB: Remember to get all of your booster shots first.
Just glanced at it today, Terry, but it looks like fun!
I will work through it tomorrow on my lunch.
Nice to see James made it.
TV
From lake geneva, to the finland station..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_i_C7r6uqE
big ups 2 TL .
Joined the little stroll and very much enjoyed it.
I have a question though. I see a lot of vintage English goods, bespoke or otherwise, made from crocodile, etc. Who would have been the clients who ordered those items? I see that some bespoke items have heraldic crests which meant they were made for aristocrats; but what of the lay clients?
Certainly all the English cordwainers made and make exotic-skinned shoes. Apparently Alan McAfee thought crocodile/alligator too pedestrian and only used sea turtle skins.
Last edited by Incroyable (2007-07-02 20:11:11)
Last edited by Incroyable (2007-07-03 03:43:01)
Agreed - Get a good name.
Also agreed on the Deco period - REAL quality and luxury that remains wearable/usable today. Odd that such a mannered style remains so classic and yet somehow it works, unlike Nouveau which seems to stay stuck in time.
There's a nice thread somewhere in cataloguing the artifacts of the socially insecure... All those over-blown items left behind from ages of rapid social change.
The popular view of the Victorians is often one of great self-confidence, but what I see mainly is a society trying to hold it all together by using pretty random totem items - Giving themselves a (false) feeling of security by evoking family crests and a heraldic heritage that was never in fact really theirs... Re-writing and re-inventing the middle-ages into a time of ludicrously effete good manners instead of the blood-soaked epoch it really was just to give their construct of The Christian English Gentleman a phoney pedigree.
Funny the things some people will do when they feel all vulnerable and under siege...
Never mind, eh?
Last edited by Terry Lean (2007-07-03 04:06:31)
An intelligently written and enjoyable article, very interesting indeed. Well done Terry.
It has prompted me to go out for a stroll myself at lunch-time...... Around the Aldwych, along Russell Street for a quick look at J. Simon's sale preview. Then through Covent Garden, Leicester Square and Coventry Street, across the Haymarket, along Jermyn Street and up through the Arcade, window shopping all the way. Then back, heading east along Piccadilly stopping to pop into Cordings on the way back to work........
Last edited by Chris_H (2007-07-03 04:26:08)
The Heath, up in North London -
http://www.cix.co.uk/~archaeology/hampstead-heath/autumn03/autumn.htm
Lots of nice shots of this much loved landmark where you might even meet somebody famous like George Michael out exercising his dog.
And Hampstead village is lovely to explore too...
http://www.london-walks.co.uk/34/index.shtml
The nearest chemists is down in Camden, btw: http://www.192.com/directory.cfm/HAMPSTEAD/CHEMIST
I like ornate crests. They remind me of pasta, yum.
Just read the article, Terry.
Really enjoyed it and it's a fine reference!
TV
Thanks, T.
Part Two is almost done & dusted.
Last edited by Terry Lean (2007-07-04 08:34:40)
It is a great feeling to have authors on the website all of whom write much better and more interestingly than i do. It's also good stuff for people who actually want to get into clothing without intimidation or smarmy, ulterior motives.
I think we will have to post photos, Terry.
TV