I don't really think it's the former. I don't even know when jeans became accepted as 'Ivy League'.
Are some of those guys on 'Take Ivy' wearing white lab coats?
This discussion isn't entirely new. I recall something about a dozen years ago, but Alvey has reminded me of something: Filson (for instance) and 'vintage' chambray can often cost you an arm and a leg - especially if you buy from the highly enthusiastic Japanese. If it's a 'trend', it's one that's been with us for quite a while.
'Ivy League' to me is the button-down, the soft shoulder, the loafer, the wingtip. It's golf clothing for the non-golfer. It's board shirts for the non-surfer.
I looked over some work wear in Nottingham a couple of months ago. Rejected it. Looked over the 'generic Americana'. Rejected that, too. Shaun is not selling 'Ivy League'. He told me so. He's selling to the slightly hip student.
Die Workwear?
Look at the Filson Mackinaw, coming from Japan, on Ebay.
Let's imagine you had close to £700 to spend on Ebay...
To take this to a slight extreme, think of John Simons statement to our Gibson, that Weejuns are virtually slippers. Furthermore, The Guv'Nor was known to wear, whilst pacing the floor at Russell Street, a loafer with so thin a sole they could have passed as slippers. So, what are you going to wear with your costly Mackinaw? Red Wings? Something even more functional? You're thus instantly transported from the world of the beef-roll loafer to that of the hipster who has spent far too much of his time recently thinking about Marlon Brando in 'On The Waterfront'.
I appreciate workwear, but it's one step too far for me, personally. When I've spent long periods of time in the country, I start to adopt pieces here and there from the homes of friends (lined barn jackets and Carhartt coats). And there are tons of young guys walking around Brooklyn wearing bricklayers coats and French street sweepers chore jackets. I don't think it looks bad, but it's too far away from what I wore as a kid, or what I do now...
It's a fad, a fetish, I hope will fade. Chore jackets, duck hunting gear (including little Elmer Fudd-style hats with ear-flaps and those horrid boots), garage mechanics uniforms, even those proletarian-looking bowling shirts (Hey, Chuck here was telling me how his old man voted three times for Nixon after Watergate... Another Bud and rye, toots...) 'Generic Americana' it might be, on offer once upon a time at Russell Street it might have been, on sale at Chiltern Street it might be from time to time now... but I never paid anything like that for my Filson Mackinaw, believe me. Nor, I shouldn't have thought, was it on my back very often. Even some Pendleton proved to be unsatisfactory: something with popper buttons for instance.
Coming soon: the distressed, trashed cashmere chore jacket.
AFS,
I think that time has a lot to do with this.
Say, for example, it's 1988 in Russell Street and John Simons is selling Filson and Carhartt. It links to J Simons as the best place to buy American clothes be it Alden loafers, heavy duty sweatshirts by Russell or Sero OCBD's. Most people who visit the store are grabbing individual items because they're different from Cecil Gee or Wodehouse. If you shop there long enough you will end up looking slightly different but in an exceptionally subtle way.
Move onto now and reproduction clothing, be it military leathers, replica jeans or Great Depression suits by RRL is a whole separate scene. You have Mens File magazine and Clutch Cafe. The clothes cost a lot more and I would guess that for some that's the attraction. The brands are often about accuracy to the original template rather than specifiacally country of origin.
Occasionally, something crosses over to Ivy but I would say it's limited to very few things like sweatshirts.
Chiltern Street is a different proposition. Due to a number of well known factors there is less Made In the USA items. Nothing wrong with that and some of the things for sale are really exciting. For an exceptionally small shop it punches well above it's weight. It has no pretensions of being fashion forward but is still highly relevant.
^ Beautifully put, Alvey, if I may say so.
Certainly TRS noticed - and noted - a decrease in the volume of US items being sold at Russell Street.
I've always been fascinated by the nature of the decisions made in retail: the risks, the gamble: Will this sell? For how much? How many should we stock? Will we have to discount heavily/offer them in the next Sale? You know. I'm very, very interested in margins.
Plenty of pretty interesting Americana at Chiltern Street: Ebbets Field, Poten, Camber.
Appropriated Ivy. By the 70s it was full-blown in the form of Tom Wolfe style "Funky Chic", but it was also a thing to some degree in earlier eras. One strain was sincere, like the poorly-hidden desire of visiting outdoorsman to look like the backcountry locals rather than like the tourists they were, and one was ironic, like the Princeton "beer suit" fad where undergrads would put painters' clothes on over their usual clothes to go out drinking to avoid spilling beer on them.
Tom Wolfe had a very good eye for this, in that he noted it wasn't *all* workwear that was desired, it was workwear through an Ivy League lens, often creating a look that an actual blue-collar worker from the present would find unpleasant, the "Down-and-Out, bib overalls, Down Home, I'm Gonna Send You Back to Georgia" look.
Last edited by katon (2021-12-18 12:24:17)
Interesting post, Katon, though I had to use the 'Quote' function in order to read it.
You reminded me of the fact my elder daughter was wearing Osh Kosh dungarees before beginning school: thus looking like a mini painter and decorator/engine driver/farmhand or whatever. It hadn't quite occurred to me before.
In my early purist years I would have aggressively rejected any idea of compatibility between Ivy and workwear. In the mid 80s when John Simons began importing Carhartt I questioned his reasoning, his response - "John, I tell you, you can make these jackets Ivy. You wash them a few times, they soften and they fit in with the look". I was a definite sceptic, and John had other non-Ivy elements as part of the mix - work books, jeans (some still have an issue with Ivy and jeans), chunky knits. But I have come to realise it is all part of a spectrum - what makes Ivy is the colour palate, the fit, the textures. Red wing boots and a sack jacket - it can work, I've done it often. Jeans with rockabilly turn-ups? Yep. At this point, more than 50 years since Ivy was a viable, popular, cogent style, you just can't think along strict lines, it's all an invention, a work of imagination. Ralph was a trailblazer in this respect - mixing elements of Americana, he, or his designers, could see how they melded together - plaid with denim, seersucker, flannel, corduroy, linen, tweed, good leather and suede, certain silhouettes and patterns that recur through Americana/trad dressing. I think John Simons grasped this early on too, though I wonder how much he was influenced by Ralph? I've never asked him this.
Last edited by Tworussellstreet (2021-12-19 12:23:52)
I still think that Ralph Lauren is a design genius. No doubts whatever on that score. But I still believe that work wear nullifies something. It's also prone to people giving it something like 'cult status' - if that makes any kind of sense.
I don't have an issue with Ivy and jeans - yet to wear any kind of denim jacket (what as teenagers we always called a jean jacket) would be wrong, wouldn't it? I do value denim shirts pretty highly, though.
I've turned more 'post-collegiate' recently. Gloverall, striped woollen scarves, Russell sweats and zip-ups.
In the 1970’s, in America, painter’s pants became all the rage for high school kids. They were made of a heavy canvas-y fabric, had hammer loops and were mostly off-white. I haven’t thought of them in a while.
I remember reading about those but didn't realise they were being worn as long ago as the 70s. I think this kind of thing still crops up on Ebay, the sellers hoping to attract that type who imagine it's cool to lash out big bucks to look like a moonlighting official of the Teamsters.
A slightly odd thing about 'generic Americana' (for want of a better phrase), I never felt excited about going into 'American Classics' in the way I did walking through the door at Russell Street. Even now I don't look upon 501s (for instance) with great enthusiasm. Maybe I've been wearing Levis for too long. I got far more pleasure wearing the chocolate pincord Bean last week, with white Makers OCBD and that heather-coloured Paine slipover.
Butchers coats and lab coats were worn on the terraces mid 60s to mid 70s. Often seen at Cup Finals. Not expecting to see them as part of a workwear revival.
I seem to remember chaps at Cold Blow Lane sporting some odd gear, Robbie, including Covid-type masks. Not to mention the polo necks and lacy cardigans favoured by Harry The Dog etc. Waders, too?
I think donkey jackets were seen elsewhere.
Interesting that by around - 1981/2 - would it be? - London boys were going for that softer look that became known as 'Casual'.
I think the NW (as in Manchester and Liverpool) claim to have started the 'Casual' look with London catching up later but unlike Robert Elms I'm no expert on British youth movements/trends.
AFS, i´m quite sure that softer London Casual look started much earlier. Maybe around 1976? Think that the term "Casual" started to get used in the very early 80s. There´s evidence that especially south of the river there´s been a kind of "Dresser" scene. US or Italian loafers, Fiorucci jeans (or real American Levis), Lacoste polos, Scottish knitwear. Even blazers and button-downs. And Burberry / Acquascutum rain coats. Interesting.
2RS said ‘ In my early purist years I would have aggressively rejected any idea of compatibility between Ivy and workwear……’
Thanks - a great post that sums up some things I’ve been thinking about for a while, but as ever 2RS expresses them a lot better than I could have. Ivy doesn’t exist in a vacuum and while walking about all the time dressed like a college professor sounds appealing it doesn’t fit with everyday life as it is now. The inspiration is drawn more from the professor’s students who utilised various pieces like the painter pants Jdemy has mentioned, albeit that was in the 1970s.
Oh, crikey, I must set aside my duffle coat and tweed jacket forthwith and see about getting some of those painter pants - preferably with some authentic 1970s paint spattered across them.
Come off it, Woof. Of course our Gibson's post was a pre-Christmas cracker (I'm already working on 'The Wit And Wisdom Of Toffeeman'), but (you'll be surprised to hear) just because that Saint John said it and the other Saint John stocked it it doesn't mean I have any intention of wearing it.
In fact, at sixty two with a full head of cropped grey hair, I feel that I'm really too old to be wearing even Levis. A big part of me feels I really ought to have taken Yuca's advice and invested in a couple of pairs of O'Connell's cords instead of buying more inexpensive bits and pieces. But I once had a conversation with Jeff Garet over some rather expensive John Lobb shoes I'd bought and he shook his head in disbelief and said they weren't good value for money. It's a slightly difficult one.
I suppose my look now is just as 'considered' as twelve to fifteen years ago. Much before that I'd say it was somewhat self-conscious. Now, though, I want to be, once dressed, 'oblivious' to my look.
I do still miss Jimbo and wonder what his take on this might have been.
A 'Big Ben' chore jacket at £80 on Ebay. Is this supposed to be some kind of private joke on the part of the seller? You can dangle the frayed ends of the cuffs in your almond milk.
A serious question: where is Carhartt being made nowadays? I saw a chap wearing one of their jackets just the other day. Out with the wife, very much 'used to go to the caravan at Skegness, now thinking of moving to Spain' types, talking about a nice settee for the 'connie'. They both looked, well, badly dressed.
Die work wear!
Wrecked, slashed and even dirty - Filson a dozen or more years ago, chore jackets now. Virtue conjured up out of stupidity.