What do you think of Purple? you people eaters. I have never owned anything purple (it just doesn’t seem manly to me).
I ask because I am a real lover of end on end makers and always try to nab them, however I have been watching
A purple one for some time now and cannot bring myself to buy it.
Helio Makers are good in my book. Leer owns a very nice one.
I have a purple silk knit tie. I've only worn it once but it's not because I don't like it. I just don't feel like a purple guy that often.
It does look cool with a plain blue button down and a very dark blue blazer.
A right royal and regal colour, but allegedly a hue of bad omens and luck in Italy.
Very 1980s for me, all electronic synths and memories of the Human League which needless to say, was a colour I sported with some relish.
Does Lavender count? I ain't got no purp.
I like Deep Purple but maybe that's because I'm a Leo.
My sunglasses are supposed to be ultraviolet. They look black to me.
Silk cut
I've got a purple pair of socks that I wear from time to time. Look pretty good with dark jeans and sneakers.
I guess it could work as long as you didn't pair it with a black suit and a pink tie - the worst look ever. I've got an old madras shirt that has faded from navy to purple-ish, and that's about it. I thought purple was the colour of the sexually frustrated?
Had a nice pale lavender oxford-cloth buttondown by Sero bought at a fine old shop that's gone now, Ara's in Wellesley spring '82; still have a couple of loud early '80s repps from Andover that have a purple stripe; an excellent plum, silver and green striped Robert Talbott repp from Andover that's one of my favorites; and a canvas belt from Paul Stuart with lavender, navy and gray stripes, think that's it, can't imagine getting more than that, still think the right shirt can look good in that helio color.
.... just noticed two more, a late '90s Andover Shop purple and white university stripe end-on-end in pima cotton and a late '80s Andover Shop repp tie in light blue and lavender from England ... purple reign I guess ....
Last edited by stanshall (2013-09-06 15:56:41)
I am very cautious with purple. Don't like it very much. Actually, I only have one faded madras shirt with purple in it. I am not colour-blind, but have problems with red/green, don't know how it is called in English. This led to some desastrous purchases in the past, when the items I thought to be blue or navy turned out to be in purple shades.
In my country, they say " purple, the last attempt", when older women wear purple.
There's a bit here and there in the collection. An old Makers helio. A Makers in a deeper purple. A Makers in a bold stripe. A very light purple banker's stripe from Lands End. I rarely wear them, though. It seems as if I am waiting for that rare occasion when I know it wouldn't look out of place, e.g., a dimly lit bar where the customers are half way to inebriation.
Regarding Axe's comment, a bit of purple in a madras wouldn't look out of place, or so it seems to me.
I have some old purple Smedley (cardy & v neck) and a lighter purplish shaggy doggish crew...think darker is better...
One of my Frenchy chores is almost purple too come to think of it...and i've a purple makers...
Gawd - I never knew I liked it so much?!?
P.S. I've a marvelous very old purple paisley tootal too...now THAT I DO REALLY LOVE....
P.P.S. The Captain rocks the purple it would seem...
Just about to start another thread and stumbled on this.
I once had a Troy Guild shirt that struck me as purple. I wore it because it was a Troy Guild shirt and ten a penny they are not.
I don't want to sound like that former poster, Oo Bop Sh'Bang or whatever the chap's name was but there are theories concerning colour from a psychological perspective along the lines of purple (for example) being worn by people pretty low down in the social and economic pecking order. There's also a comment above about sexual repression. Any (clean) thoughts?
Just bought a purple Five Brother flannel Made In The USA shirt for the price of a pint in Spoons plus a bag of pork scratchings. It should go nicely with these beaten-up black Wranglers I'm wearing. 'Americana' rather than 'Ivy League' to be sure but I have a liking for thick flannel shirts whilst on my travels around the hilly town in which I dwell. (A thick mist in the valley has not yet lifted). Style (not 'Ivy') for today is a rather mediocre Brooks shirt (nasty collar), a thrifted cable-knit v-neck (my wife: she always means well - hence that trip on my behalf to Murray's Toggery whilst we were living separate lives), the aforementioned black Wranglers. Johnny Hodges and Clark Terry on in the background.
Oh, some arse online talks about FB shirts as being 'curated'. Since when was Ebay The Museum Of Modern Art or the V&A?
Wasn't purple a colour that only Royalty could afford? So long ago now that it's hardly relevant though I'm sure.
Got a couple of bits. Nothing very exiting. A Ben Sherman, socks, maybe a crew somewhere.
If I had to I'd probably place it very low on the list of 'Ivy League' colours - but I've no idea why.
I saw an Alan Paine sweater recently. I wouldn't wear a purple sweater. A shirt like this is strictly for dossing around in: reading up on Arshile Gorky, listening to jazz, scratching my ancient cat behind her ears, mixing a salad. As an 'Ivy League' colour? - vying with 'Kelly green' perhaps. Wouldn't want to look like a Celtic supporter when my Glaswegian brother-in-law comes to visit...
Orange seems to find very little favour. I have experimented: two shirts, one sweater. The first shirt, a Ralph Lauren, I sometimes wore when working at a 'progressive' school (i.e. no uniform or discipline, bad exam results etc.). It seemed to have a calming effect on some of the more unruly pupils. A working prostitute also commented favourably on it. The second was a Sero half-sleeve. I think The Weejun may have worn one once upon a time, doubtless to greater effect than I. The sweater was bought in Puglia and didn't last long. Someone on here, many more moons ago than I care to remember, said that the wearing of orange knitwear would not make the wearer look like Frank Sinatra. He was perfectly correct.
Bit goth ain't it? Purple that is. Orange is difficult but in very small doses it works i.e. I have a vintage Brooks foulard tie which features a little bit of orange and looks amazing. It's received good comments from chicks but, as far as I know, none were working prostitutes. One never knows though.
'Oh, some arse online talks about FB shirts as being 'curated'. Since when was Ebay The Museum Of Modern Art or the V&A?'
Last time I looked at Ivy Style it had got so bad I couldn't even bring myself to slag it off on here. Ivy style is no longer something related to clothing but rather, purely a lifestyle. One that involves writing pompous, meaningless crap and posting it online. We can't be the only ones to be wondering what the hell is going on.
Goth? Now, where did I put my eyeliner? No, not really, just - heavy cotton and without a pointless, skimpy button-down collar.
I know nothing of Five Brother. Maybe something similar to J.C. Penney. Wouldn't be amazed to find one in 'Wild'.
Never heard of Five Brother either but with UK temps such as they are at present, I'd wear anything in heavy cotton, regardless of its appearance.
I hate myself for saying this, dear Yuca, but could it be because they're Americans? I mean, look at CC. I've no wish to spark off another bout of JFM versus CC-style conflict - some of our best posters were (and still are) American gentlemen - but the English did (do?) seem to have the edge via Messrs. Simons (father and son), Gall and one or two others.
'Wild' might not be a bad place to nose round in. They were certainly selling decent Pendleton shirts in there the last time I called in. And Shaun is realistic in his pricing.
'I hate myself for saying this, dear Yuca, but could it be because they're Americans? I mean, look at CC. I've no wish to spark off another bout of JFM versus CC-style conflict - some of our best posters were (and still are) American gentlemen - but the English did (do?) seem to have the edge via Messrs. Simons (father and son), Gall and one or two others.'
I strongly suspect that the vast majority of US readers of IS are as unimpressed with its recent incarnation as I am. And to someone in the UK with a very recent interest in ivy clothing, IS as it is now may make sense.