Here's another one of my stories -
The slimmed down Ivy look in Europe had another slightly strange factor in its develpoment apart from the Italian influence...
In London, at least, many of the GIs who wore the Ivy style down the Clubs and around town wore cothes that were slightly too small for them...
Often the clothes were slightly old and the boys' bodies had been built up by military training so that what was once a regular fitting jacket had now become a little snug.
Also the boys would share clothing - Those going out on the town would borrow items from those 'staying home' on the base.
At the Fairford (Oxfordshire) airbase at one time there was even an item known as 'The Jacket' - whoever wanted it wore it! Obviously it fitted some people better than others. 'The Jacket' was a sandy coloured checked sack.
So all the clothes-obsessed London boys checking out the GIs down the clubs would see the Ivy style being worn very close to the body & think that that was the way to do it!
Either this is interesting or it isn't!
Miles
I'm bumping this just to torment you all!
Miles
Last edited by Horace (2006-10-09 05:07:35)
Bless your Ivy soul, Sir, for responding to an old man's thread -
No cuffs on military uniforms. Not in the UK not in the US.
Where is your 'orthodoxy' now, oh ye followers of the false prophet?
Shun ye the unclean one -
Ivy for everyone!
*Ahem*
My wife's grandfather has a wonderful picture of himself in his Navy uniform just before he shipped out in WWII. In the year between when he first entered service and when he left on a boat he had grown almost 5 inches. It was the first time in his life that he had consistent good healthy food and his body took full advantage of it. Of course the Navy didn't issue him a new uniform and the pictures show it well. I imagine that he's not the only poor farm boy that this happened to.
Another bump for this old chestnut to link it to the Discrepancy in Ivy League thread.
Last edited by Alex Roest (2007-02-21 06:30:01)
And again it's all details isn't it?