I had a fleece, a Rohan one, use to wear it when I was coordinating some load-outs of equipment destined for the Black Power Station in China's New Territories back in the mid-1990s. Was a useful piece of kit, although I melted a portion of it when a spark jumped from a fire once. Last time I wore it was the last year I spent in the UK, there was no summer at all and I remember the July being cold and windy and the fleece jacket came in handy.
Don't see them much here, a bit like tracksuits out of the gym.
^
I don't think there is anything wrong with that. You could use a cardigan too. I would build that look around a sports coat though.
There's nothing wrong with wearing chunky jumpers for casual, maybe not for work. Some of my employees do wear chunky cardies, but take them off when they get into the office.
Woolies seem perennially fashionable for the ladies, Mrs F. is always wearing them in winter, outside work, even on the house, and its frigging boiling!
I personally only have one truly chunky sweater, it's an old one from Bean, I wear it when I go to the beach on chilly nights, it's a beater ....
otherwise I just have some J. Press Shaggy Dog and Andover Shop brushed Shetlands from Scotland, and some lovely English and Scottish lambswool v-necks from Brooks Brothers etc. ....
oh yeah I have a nice ski sweater from Barbour, made in Scotland, it does the trick ..... it's warm but not too thick, it easily fits under other jackets if necessary .....
but I don't think thick sweaters look particularly bad on anybody, and I actually find the thread a bit odd but funny .....
ultimately, thick sweaters are quintessential New England, as well as old-school preppy to the max, and some of them are even handsome, but it is true they are wanting in the requisite exquisite dandiness and exclusivity and are sometimes worn by "rural" types, including that scruffy Bill Bryson, maybe even when he was writing some of his dozens of books ......
loved my Icelandic sweater back in the day also, that was a fun thing .... good old Antartex in NYC, miss ya
I have:
a J Crew blue shawl collar cardigan
a PRL cricket sweater
two LL Bean fisherman cables, one green, one cream,
a Pendleton loden green cable v-neck
and an LL Bean blue Norwegian.
I also own a bunch of shetlands, various makers, but I don't really think of them as chunky, although they can be thick.
My couple of LL Bean lambswool v-necks are just average thickness, I guess.
Last edited by Chipper (2016-11-02 04:12:52)
Magee Irish fishermans jumper
Black Fleece shawl collar cardigan
Alan Paine Explorer jumper
LL Bean fishermans sweater.
Worn for outdoor activities, country walks etc in the depths of winter. Too hot for urban settings where air conditioning is likely to be encountered.
i simply dont have the time to do all these nice activities which would require a chunky sweater. climate in germany and UK rarey requires more than shirt, sweater and coat.
the urban "lord" is ridiculous.
How chunky is chunky? Compared to a fleece a Shetland could be classed as chunky, and I own 5. Certainly the more generous fitting examples are a bit chunky. I'd quite like an aran sweater too, partly because I used to regard them as completely square when I was younger.
ok chunky sweater (burgundy, aran or waffle knit) looks great when worn with polka dot cravat and when on a white haired 60+ guy, think john aspinall (the QC, not the zoo owner).
didnt Drakes reintroduce the norwegian sweater with all the father xmas decor?
My chunkiness reaches brushed Shetland proportions.
I've been looking for a high quality chunky jumper and cardigan for years locally but have been unable to purchase one so far.
Way back then, before they became a fashion brand, Barbour had some nice classics, in green, navy or creme.
https://encrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSttyHrST-S3fSP4I5azavm_oKFin3fnKOpU7qHbm98WiGC8ahb
Cool picture
Muffy wears it well: http://www.saltwaternewengland.com/2016/11/the-aran-cable-collar-cardigan-for.html
http://www.saltwaternewengland.com/search/label/Made%20in%20the%20British%20Isles
Last edited by Chipper (2016-11-03 18:48:57)
Wondering how the turtleneck fits into the chunky spectrum. I just ordered the J. Crew merino turtleneck in navy. I haven't owned a turtleneck probably since college.
The turtleneck is not chunky. It enjoys periods of being in fashion and out. I've never felt the need for them.
And I never knew what to wear underneath a turtleneck sweater.
If it's a slimmer or thinner kind (as opposed to the seafaring chunky ones), I just wear a thin t-shirt to prevent itchiness from the wool and to protect the pits from perspiration, i.e., just an underwear garment that doesn't show.
Last edited by Chipper (2016-11-06 09:32:06)
And I don't own T-Shirts