excellent shirts
I own a couple or 3 and they are the best fitting shirts I own
will be sadly missed
The reality for Henry was his short run quantities meant the cost of making a shirt was £45 or so per unit, so there is no way he would be able to meet that middle price point you suggest. At the end of the day he could have sent over seas and maybe sold them cheaper, but he wanted to make them here, in the UK and support local manufacturing.
Unfortunately it was this insistence and what can only be described as despicable behaviour on the part of the manufacturer (holding on to the patterns) that has sadly meant the end to this wonderful product.
id much rather pay £95 for a well made limited run shirt to the specifications that I favour
to a mass produced "not bad" shirt, just my opinion mind
Don't get me wrong, I wasn't having a go.
Apologies if it came across that way.
Costs of £45 per shirt just go to show why the manufacturing industry has moved overseas. Sadly, those costs just are viable for a new business.
Still pissed that I didn't get that uni stripe ..
You pay for what you get and i own three Fcs and like them all.
If H had gone for a full cut Makers clone i would have bought far more but that's a personal choice as i am a makers nut.
Which reminds me AC, did you get my PM about that Makers?
Half decent is a pretty ambiguous term so I don't see how you can debate that one. 'Decent' is obviously positive and 'half' in this context is negative, so you can take it how you want.
Back in the day Brooks Makers shirts were really not that expensive, particularly considering they were world famous for quality and quite possibly even became a status symbol, albeit one that was affordable for many. Selling them at a decent price was a very democratic approach, from an era when capitalism was creating a vast quantity of high quality consumer goods. Only a few decades ago but it might as well be ancient history.
The Fitz look very nice, however as even in the boom years genuine ivy shirts were never particularly successful in the UK, it's unlikely they can find much favour all these years later. I just hope it had sufficient success whilst it lasted, and the proprietor can be tempted into further classic clothing adventures. Preferably something a bit harder to find such as decent trousers.
Last edited by Yuca (2015-02-23 10:48:14)
Cool, i'll hold my hands up I alerted Bop to it too, so i'll let you chaps duke it out.
Theres a sweet BB for me there too but also have to wait for payday - need to list some unworn things on the bay too, might go do that tonight.
Sid is of course right, the reality is, for most people, most of the time and even some of the people some of the time, Fitz and others are way too expensive and are almost a luxury item. Ivy, in the boom period of its diaspora, was affordable to the common man.
Like many on this forum I'm sorry to hear that Henry has had to draw stumps and head back to the pavilion. My green OCBD is one of my favourites, and I'm glad I snapped one up. I congratulate him on his endeavours so far, and do hope that he doesn't give up the clothing game entirely.
I've admired these shirts for a long time but having just bought my first house could never afford one. I managed to snap a couple of white OCBD yesterday. A damn shame you've had to knock it on the head.
I had a bad feeling that this would happen. In the UK people are only interested in cheap and nasty. The Ivy market is small. When is the last time that out in the real world you spotted a well dressed Ivy person? The average person doesn't care about quality or where a product is made so long as the correct logo is on display.