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#26 2021-11-26 13:42:07

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: Back Button And Locker Loop

Untucked shirts I only like with shorts. Take Ivy has some good examples.


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#27 2021-11-26 13:57:49

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: Back Button And Locker Loop

https://classicalbumsundays.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/miles1.jpg

This has a flap pocket.


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#28 2021-11-26 14:33:02

RobbieB
Member
Posts: 2219

Re: Back Button And Locker Loop

I've got a couple of RL popover shirts in bleeding Madras. Made in India., no logos with a back button and locker loop. Both have a top pocket, one with a flap. Decent collar roll. The medium one is a little tight and my beer paunch becomes visible, so not so good. The large one is more forgiving and is a beauty. They are both lengthy so I wear them tucked and untucked depending on the location. I had a third one that I washed at high temperature to get some bleeding action and it shrunk. My wife wears it now and it looks great on her.


'I am a closet optimist' Leonard Cohen.

 

#29 2021-11-27 13:09:50

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

Re: Back Button And Locker Loop

I believe the earliest Brooks Brothers button downs were 4 button pullover shirts, not 3 button pullovers.

Then 5 button coat style, then 6 buttons.

I remember seeing pictures on Heavy Tweed Jacket blog but it’s not the part that has survived.

There is still some good stuff here:

https://tweed232.rssing.com/chan-6217567/all_p3.html


“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?"

 

#30 2021-11-27 16:36:15

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: Back Button And Locker Loop

To me a 3 button would be a popover. Which I don't think Brooks ever did until recent years.


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#31 2021-11-28 10:14:33

slimmm67
Member
Posts: 112

Re: Back Button And Locker Loop

Girls at my high school in the early-mid 1980's referred to the locker loop by the politically incorrect term "the f-g tag".

 

#32 2021-11-28 10:19:58

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: Back Button And Locker Loop

I must admit I had to stop wearing shirts with locker loops because they were causing me to have homosexual tendencies. Whereas with Brooks I've been totally straight. (Not even lady boys have interested me.)


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#33 2021-11-28 10:33:20

slimmm67
Member
Posts: 112

Re: Back Button And Locker Loop

I'm pro-locker loop, I just had the misfortune to grow up in an unpleasant locale.

 

#34 2021-11-28 10:36:45

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: Back Button And Locker Loop

I think that phrase was pretty common in the US back in the day. We live and learn.


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#35 2021-11-28 10:38:18

slimmm67
Member
Posts: 112

Re: Back Button And Locker Loop

On the brighter side, there was a girl who wore a purple shetland most pleasingly.

 

#36 2021-11-28 15:28:05

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

Re: Back Button And Locker Loop

I’m not sure about it but I use pullover or popover shirt synonymously. I think Jimmy made that distinction up.
RE: Brooks. I only know about their four button pullover shirts until the 1950s or so.
Think the three button ones were more a thing by Gant, Sero, Dickies, Troy etc…


“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?"

 

#37 2021-11-28 15:46:02

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: Back Button And Locker Loop

I vaguely recall a post 1990s Brooks popover. I think the nomenclature is correct i.e. pullover is the old style 4 or 5 button with a placket coming almost to the waist whilst popover only came into being with the 1960s short placket shirt. The 2 are certainly very different.


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

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