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#1 2021-11-02 02:35:03

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Slacks and The Look Of '62

I'm intrigued and would like to know much, much more.  I've seen at least two references to what I imagine must be a very specific look. 
Information so far comes from a couple of TRS postings.

 

#2 2021-11-02 02:51:20

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

TRS has come and gone -like the flash of Ivy lightning he tends to be.  And it's his fault I'm asking these questions!  Slacks I get, the specific '62 bit not quite.

 

#3 2021-11-02 10:16:41

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

Many hours have passed and I'm still none the wiser.  The slacks were worn cuffed and slightly short?  With slim loafers?

 

#4 2021-11-02 11:51:34

Tworussellstreet
Member
Posts: 599

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

Dear AFS - I know not of what you speak... Was this an Esquire feature or photo shoot I was referring to? 1962 was a great Ivy year of course.

 

#5 2021-11-02 11:59:39

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

No, no, a JS look of the 1980s.  JS sockless.

 

#6 2021-11-02 12:02:04

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

Actually, that's very interesting.  What was the 'greatest Ivy year', and why?  My word, this is when we need Jimbo the most: a man who almost always had the answers - or would attempt to find out.

 

#7 2021-11-02 12:04:26

Tworussellstreet
Member
Posts: 599

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

Oh well yes, when I was working there part time in 87 he used to often wear these dark grey worsted Ivy slacks with a 2 inch turn up, no socks and he had these rare Weejuns that were dark brown cordovan colour, but with a thinner sole. They were like house slippers, but they were Weejuns. He'd wear this look even with a shetland and polo shirt/button down. I thought it was very Ivy in that way all the rules are kind of broken and it looks a bit weird. He often brought his own thing to 'the look'. Have you seen the way he dresses now? A bit bonkers but great for an old bloke in his 80s.

 

#8 2021-11-02 12:07:48

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

We read about slacks as worn by the opposite sex during wartime as proof positive of promiscuity, much smoking of Lucky Strike cigarettes, attempts to look like Veronica Lake or Carole Landis.  But with the chaps what gave/gives?  Plain fronted as well as loose-fitting?

 

#9 2021-11-02 12:11:07

Tworussellstreet
Member
Posts: 599

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

Off the top of my head, by instinct, based on my browsing of printed American media of the period - Playboy, Esquire, New Yorker, Apparel Arts - I'd say

55/6 - Ivy bubbling under, about 15% of the market
57 to 60 - becoming a trend, about 30%
60-63 - pure beautiful years, Ivy now very hip, about 50%
64-6 - going mainstream, all ages wearing it, colours getting bold, narrower cuts, about 70%
67 - the year natural shoulder/traditional/tweed started, rapidly, to become unfashionable
68 onwards - you're not getting laid with short hair and slip on shoes

 

#10 2021-11-02 12:13:14

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

TRS, I do study his look a bit in photographs.  There's one where he's wearing a grey and white, rather wide striped shirt, very similar to a Brooks I once had.  I think his look can be, well, mildly eccentric - but see nothing wrong with that: quite the opposite.  I've been trying to pin down some shoes he's wearing and it did cross my mind that his feet might now be a bit tender (not unlike my own).  I love the specs, the slightly owlish look, the rain on the shoulders of the Burberrys' mac (yes?).

 

#11 2021-11-02 12:15:11

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

Lovely,  Lovely.  Not quite eighty five per cent then (a JFM figure, I do believe), but getting fairly close.

 

#12 2021-11-03 02:45:55

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

Just reading James Ellory's 'The Big Nowhere', set (thus far) around LA, early January 1950.  Descriptions of male clothing abound.  An especially well-dressed cop is able to dress well because he's on the take.  Other characters, pretty affluent, change from their suits into sport shirts and khakis.  Yet another character is all camelhair and cashmere.  Not a hint of the clothing we know so well from Hollywood of that period (and shortly before) where a lot of the male characters seem to dress in suits that are a size too big for them. 
Re JS and bending/breaking the 'Ivy rules'.  I guess, in the end, that's what counts, providing one has the confidence to carry it off.  I like the idea of a loafer being almost like a house slipper.  I'm trying to move back into a softer look, leaving behind the heftier shoes for loafers and Astorflex; maybe some new bucks.  Now, JS has always, it seems to me, struck more than a single balance in his look - and can find no imitators.  A consistent 'Beat Mod' in some of his incarnations; not all, not by any means.  In fact, subtract the 'Mod' bit and substitute 'Modernist' in that Village/Jackson Pollock/Lenny Bruce kind of way (maybe? as JFM would have said).  Or can you really pin it down?  I wonder.

 

#13 2021-11-04 17:05:36

Madras_Seersucker
Member
Posts: 363

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

TRS said: 68 onwards - you're not getting laid with short hair and slip on shoes

THAT'S been my problem my whole adult life. Dammit! wink

 

#14 2021-11-06 02:35:49

Hard Bop Hank
Ivy Soul Brother
From: land of a 1000 dances
Posts: 4923

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62
“Lovely,  Lovely.  Not quite eighty five per cent then (a JFM figure, I do believe), but getting fairly close??

Jimmy used to talk hyperbole a lot. However, when you talked to him on the telephone he was very calm and collected.

As far as I remember he even said that Ivy was 80% of the market in 1959 already. No idea where he got these figures from…


“No Room For Squares”
”All political art is bad – all good art is political.”
"Would there be any freedom of press or speech if one must reduce his vocabulary to vapid innocuous euphemisms?"

 

#15 2021-11-06 02:37:05

Hard Bop Hank
Ivy Soul Brother
From: land of a 1000 dances
Posts: 4923

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

>>Lovely,  Lovely.  Not quite eighty five per cent then (a JFM figure, I do believe), but getting fairly close<<

Jimmy used to talk hyperbole a lot. However, when you talked to him on the telephone he was very calm and collected.

As far as I remember he even said that Ivy was 80% of the market in 1959 already. No idea where he got these figures from…


“No Room For Squares”
”All political art is bad – all good art is political.”
"Would there be any freedom of press or speech if one must reduce his vocabulary to vapid innocuous euphemisms?"

 

#16 2021-11-06 02:49:53

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: Slacks and The Look Of '62

60-63 sounds good - in fact, better than good.  But I suppose it depended upon who you were and where you were.  I still have this stupid habit of thinking of/believing in a kind of 'pure Ivy League America', doubtless based upon tiny glimpses of NYC in films, books and on TV.  Then there's the music of course.  Without a time machine, it all has to remain a European fantasy.  Perhaps, thinking about this, TRS is more realistic about it than I ever can be. 

Jimmy was fine on the 'phone, except when he allowed himself to be dominated by internet-induced waffle and imagined others were similarly tuned in.

 

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