Tassel loafers and Hermes ties with little animals - a relict of the 1980ies?
Discuss!
Oh, and while we are at it - Fairisle sweaters - do they only look good on skinny hipster types and / or grumpy white haired Bill Bryson / Theodore Bikel men, while they make middle aged out of shape men look even more middle aged and out of shape?
Fairisle sweaters: I tried on a couple in Drakes when my wife's need to buy me a Christmas present became desperate, but they just don't do it for me. For one thing, as has been pointed out, they are not particularly flattering if you are carrying a few pounds. They're just too jolly and redolent of Christmas which I dislike at the best of times, they're best left to the 'country in the city' types and old blokes who just don't care anymore.
Tassel loafers: I guess they have a certain skinhead/mod baggage in the UK, but I'm a big fan and often wear them in the summer. The reason being that I like them and that very few men here wear them. They are an affectation pure and simple, but a very low key affectation. As such they would never be worn by the great majority of men who have no interest in style, the sort of men who allow their wives to buy clothes for them unsupervised, the sort of men with whom I want clear blue sartorial water between me and them. Tassel loafers make this crowd feel slightly uncomfortable. Providing they are not worn as part of some sort of reenactors outfit, tassel loafers immediately mark you out as someone who takes an interest in what they wear. I have about four pairs.
Interesting.
At some time, I woulc say late 1980ies/early 1990ies, tassel loafers (the cheap kind) were clearly a mark of the nerd (in a bad way) in our country.
FI-sweaters: ditto. They make me look old, also in a bad way.
I can see FI sweaters on people with cropped hair/thick horn rimmed glasses, dark blue denim and cordo boots. But that is definitely not my style.
Best XX
Yes, but all this oh-its-1964-again-and-I-wish-I-was-Gunter-Sachs-or-the-Duke-of-Windsor thing is awful. Yes, you can ski on wooden skiers and wear a FI sweater. The alpine equivalent of a single speed bike hipster.
Full disclosure: I have never skied, but enjoy sun in the snow as a spectator.
Tassel loafers are basically de riguer here. You look more out of place not wearing them.
Stansy, maybe FI in very small quantities works. The idea of FI socks - why not. And there is muted FI and crazy, look-at-me FI.
BBC did a documentary on Fair Isle. It is a tough life up there. The islanders usually have several jobs. The knitting is still going strong and they do reasonable business when a cruise ship turns up. BBC never showed the actual ship. I expect it is a smallish craft.
http://www.shetnews.co.uk/features/13650-bbc-s-intimate-portrait-of-life-on-fair-isle
/\ agreed ... my Fair Isle sweater is laid-back .... I'm glad I have it, bought it in '82 ... Back Bay bounty .... very cold winters there then .... now it's an artifact but I don't like to throw stuff out ... the 35-year-old Fair Isle sweater and emblematic ties stay ... I have given away a pair of outgrown Alden tassel loafers though which was a shame/good deed because they were in good shape ....
The world moves on....
/\ sic transit gloria billy mundi ...
Thank god. I am trying to think less about the past than I used to. Unfortunately sounds, musics, smells easily trigger not only single memories, but complete episodes. Drinking makes it worse, even moderately.
2 J. Press Fair Isle. Cardigan, V-neck. 2 Alden tassel. 1 Tan. 1 Burgundy.
So you are trying to tell us what excactly?
Thinking about it, a whimsical tie with a V-neck might just be the ticket.
I have this J.Press tie which is a background of white and then has some Tiki dancing stuff going in various shades of garish orange. I'm thinking with a white shirt and navy or black V-neck could go down a treat.
Black V-Neck? No, just no.
Shit I own:
Black V-Neck sweater vest- check
Tassel loafers (Brown suede and Black calf)-check
Fair isle grayish vest-check
Have not used the Fair isle in a while, but thanks for the reminder will dig it out presto.
I have one of those ties (small lizards in my case) and actually quite like it now and then. But I don't keep a collection.
There is a shop in the City that sells rip-offs of the Hermes ones under their own brand, apparently made in the UK, for about £60 with more nautical type patterns (fish, sea horses and so on) in vaguely washed-out colours. I am trying to avoid walking past it too often.
Cool! I want one!
I also think we should also frequent a rip-off of FNB forum,