Navy Aquascutum sounds good to me. I miss my old 'FBI' navy raincoat from circa 2009.
Woof - sounds like you’ve been visiting Feltham !
Staxfan - Woof - sounds like you’ve been visiting Feltham !
Stanwell, but I had an office in Feltham for two years so I got to know the town via lunchtime expeditions, it was rare to hear an English voice. Good Polish, Vietnamese and Rumanian restaurants, plus the normal Indian and Chinese. Kingstonian would appreciate the local Spoons where you don’t make eye contact with the other patrons.
What are we calling it? Heavy Ivy?
Almost head to toe LL Bean today, from long underwear through lined flannel shirt to down jacket and lined chinos, insulated Bean boots. Only exception are the Darn Tough socks because Bean doesn't have anything close. It's freaking cold out and I have to go sit in a drafty hall and listen to someone tell us about moose.
Last edited by Patrick (2022-02-05 13:16:49)
Woof - that seamstress must be very good to risk visiting Stanwell , from what I know/knew Feltham is posh by comparison, my office was on the Nth Feltham Trading Estate for 10-12 years so away from the High Street which I understand could be tricky after dark !
Somewhat worse for wear Sebago jacket
L.L.Bean flannel shirt
L.L.Bean tattered cardigan
Russell quarter-zip
Sagging 501s (losing weight fairly rapidly)
New Balance
Feltham is Zone 6 - as far as you can get on a Freedom Pass. Never got off there. En route to Egham etc.
You can now get to Reading for free on a Freedom Pass though. Handy for a lot of nice places.
Staxfan : Woof - that seamstress must be very good to risk visiting Stanwell
She is excellent Mrs W and I have been going to her for about 5 years. The immediate vicinity where she lives is quite picturesque, except that it’s about 400 yds from the end of one of the main Heathrow runways and as you stand in the street you get an optical illusion that planes are taking off from the end of the road. But most of that area is not very salubrious it has to be said. Of course all these things are relative and there are plenty of estates in London and other cities where if the residents woke up and found themselves living in Stanwell, they would think they had died and gone to heaven.
fair comment Woof, i believe Viola Avenue is the no go area but this is getting off topic I guess , cheers
Gosh, it sounds awful in comparison to where I live, in a fairly upmarket conservation area (a pair of Grade 2 listed cottages diagonally opposite, one the holiday home of some chap from Muswell Hill), with a view from the rear windows of several hundred trees and The Chevin, the tail-end of the Pennines off over to the right. The quality of light can be amazing. At the bottom of the garden is the old medieval deer paddock, now given over to people in brightly-coloured anoraks exercising their various mutts.
Raining steadily here for the second day running. I'm just finishing off Gill's biography of that awful old cow Peggy Guggenheim.
Wearing well-worn stuff: a vintage flannel shirt, tattered Bean cardigan and beaten-up Wranglers. Rather expensive German socks.
I'm aching to replace the Bean cardigan (Scottish-made) like for like.
Raining here too, not much activity following this morning’s walk on the river. Welcoming friends for a coffee. Khaki moleskin trews, O’Connell’s check flannel shirt and a Black Sheep shawl neck cardigan (recommended by JFM) mocassin slippers.
https://www.blacksheepknitwear.com/products/jk24-the-jacket
A glimmer of sunshine up here in this northern Ivy outpost. I fancied a bit of an elderly college boy look for half a morning in a very trendy secondhand bookshop, searching for anything affordable on the likes of Stuart Davis. I wore my King Louie zip-up jacket (a kind of light, well, beige, I suppose), a flannel shirt (L.L.Bean), my newly acquired Made In The USA Levi-Strauss jumper (looks like a sweatshirt but isn't), some faded down 501s, blue Smedley socks and 'wine' Sebago loafers.
The owner of the bookshop is actually called Mr. Booker and is a jolly nice chap. Charlotte, behind the cash register, is doubtless very attractive when not wearing her funny little mask.
As an aside, one is very pleased and relieved to see our old Woofboxer back on his feet after some time in hospital.
If you almost saw a short-ish, close beareded, Ivy looking geezer in St. Pancras and Kings Cross doing meetings yesterday - then that was me. More importantly then trying to outrun the wind and get back home after all the trains were cancelled from St. Pancras (hello Grantham line). Ivy classic flap/patch tweed herringbone sack, navy drill jeans, white OCBD, burgundy v-neck, navy plain scarf and Oxblood gibson shoes.
Of course it's highly likely I was unseen...
Nice to be out like that again. Even better to be inside today.
Last edited by An Unseen Scene (2022-02-18 05:37:10)
Just staggered in after a highly interesting morning in which I a. chatted to a former employee of Paul Smith and b. saw a lovely, French-made corduroy suit that reminded me of Keydge and was, sadly, too big for me. But I stocked up on CDs: Benny Goodman, Frankie (hi,Alvey), Nina Simone.
I should have put more clothes on, though - the Swingster golf jacket wasn't quite enough!
You're right, it's almost as bracing as a summer week in Mablethorpe out there.
I remember reading some young 60s scamp saying 'I bought a Frank Sinatra album just for the picture of him in the hat and then never listened to it'. I went through a heavy Frankie phase, bought all the albums and boxsets and now don't listen. I should go back. I still think Watertown is an overlooked masterpiece - if it came from someone like Glen Campbell it would be celebrated.
Suit sounds good. Any interesting thoughts from the ex-PS employee conversation? PS have some lovely stuff, some of it just about in our style - but by goodness it's priced high. Look in their sale section though, it really comes down a lot. I was given some PS vouchers by work for my 50th and found some nice unstructed Kedge style jackets in outlet that were a bargain, okay for works night out when wanting to mix in a bit.
Last edited by An Unseen Scene (2022-02-18 08:07:21)
The lady, who was knocking seventy I should have thought, had worked for Paul Smith in Nottingham. She said what a nice guy he is and that his business partner (unnamed) lived in the next village to us, died recently, and Smith was up for the funeral. Also that she'd been involved in a London photo-shoot. There was also a bit of chat about the Italian end, that she'd been involved in early design work but that eventually they couldn't find the mechanics to service their machines, so involved had the Italians become.
As for Paul Smith's clothing, I had a nice jacket in a kind of mossy green twenty-odd years ago. Nothing else.
John Simons always spoke very highly of him when the shops were within walking distance of one another.
The lady had clearly never heard of John Simons.
My wife was obviously worried about the weather so I had to cut it short.
BTW, the suit was in a slightly back alley charity shop in Swanwick. It often has interesting bits and pieces and at the moment is rammed with Wrangler jeans and Dockers all at about £3 a go. I remember buying a fisherman's sweater from them about fourteen years ago.
AUS - you will know the general area, between Ilkeston, Matlock and Derby. Good quality clothing seems to turn up more often in those old ex-mining/textile areas than the posher market towns.
Interesting, thanks. He does seem a decent chap, still works properly, supports his team, cares about design and tries to do their best with companies it seems. People such as him, Dieter Rams, JS are at least examples of people who have tried to do their best, create something positive, enliven our experience and stay decent.
That area you describe is common of those that don't get attention, the 'between' bits - where the pace of change seems to go a bit more humanely. Rutland/Oakham is much the same in that regard (there was a cracking independent menswear shop down a side street there near the open air market, but not been down since about 2018 so with all we're experiencing it may of gone).
Last edited by An Unseen Scene (2022-02-18 10:01:23)
We also buy old glass, cookware, bits of what might be described as 'kitsch': anything that takes our fancy. This morning, for instance, I bought a small painting of an American car that appears to have originated in Cuba. Goodness knows how these things make their way to obscure parts of east Derbyshire!
In fact, I've just remembered, the shop in Leabrooks where I was chatting to the lady was where I bought two very decent Alan Paine slipovers around 2010. Still going strong, very much so, just like the lovely scarf our Staceyboy sent me.
Out today for the first time after almost 10 days self isolating, saw a young guy wearing pink trackies and red trainers, what’s the world coming to ?
Exciting trip out to buy stir-fry oil, multi-vitamins and stick my nose in at the local Oxfam. Rather attractive blonde browsing; doubtless unimpressed by my feeble attempts to look like George Sanders in my Grenfell shooting coat accompanied by a cashmere Brooks scarf.
Sanders: superbly supercilious in 'Rebecca' and 'All About Eve'. Can't ever imagine him not sporting a tie or not shining his shoes.
Maybe you could try Sanders of the River when the weather gets warmer?
Pith helmets were on sale in The Cut near Waterloo station.