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#26 2022-03-04 12:32:48

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: A Blue Penny Loafer

'Eventually I just couldn’t stand being in a room full of it. It was embarrassing.'

I always start with the music. For all its faults, the mid 80s mod scene was heavily into R&B, blues and jazz (plus soul and ska). By around 86 or 87 the Latin thing came in - although ironically, a lot of the big mod tracks were by artists who have done a hell of a lot better before and/or after the Latin soul/boogaloo fad. But still, a lot of good Latin tracks were discovered or rediscovered.

Towards the end of the 80s British R&B became the big thing on the mod scene - the beginning of the end really as most of it was shit. By the 90s all sorts of forgettable, dated crap was getting dug up.

Fortunately I think eventually the pendulum swung back, at least to a certain extent, plus the bigger events can have different rooms thereby catering for all tastes.

Last edited by Yuca (2022-03-04 12:34:05)


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#27 2022-03-04 13:00:37

Spendthrift
Member
Posts: 659

Re: A Blue Penny Loafer

Yes. I think they got carried away with discovering and playing unheard tracks at do’s.

You’d have to listen to all kinds of crap described as ‘fuzz’ or ‘Dutch Freakbeat’. Then someone would balance it out by playing an hour of overplayed party tracks.

People were making an effort to dress like Syd Barrett or Twiggy. Instead of the ‘hard mod’ thing that had been in before.

Plus the scene rapidly lost numbers to baggy/shoegazing and rave. Then Acid Jazz and Brit Pop.

I think it’s quite healthy now. I still love the music.

 

#28 2022-03-05 01:42:36

AFS
Member
Posts: 2740

Re: A Blue Penny Loafer

Back on-topic to some extent, names that consider themselves to be 'iconic' or 'heritage' or 'classic' (you get the picture) seem to feel an overwhelming need to lay it on with a trowel.  Clarks' do it.  Baracuta do it.  Ralph Lauren most certainly do it.  Even Brooks have dabbled.  There are others.  You can find images on Ebay every day of the week of clothing items you wouldn't accept as a gift, often at ludicrously inflated prices. 
Perhaps this is why a name like John Smedley remains reasonably popular.  It's still low-key.  Long may it remain so.
As for Sebago, they're now available in a rather poncy shop on our local high street.

 

#29 2022-03-05 02:38:18

Spendthrift
Member
Posts: 659

Re: A Blue Penny Loafer

I suppose they have to rely on any weapon in their arsenal?

Given that the overwhelming amount of clothing retail is on line now, they’d be insane not to promote their goods in that way.

I imagine new and exiting or old and trusted is good. Somewhere in the middle must be a struggle. Alvie might know more than me?

There doesn’t seem to be any ‘word on the street’ regarding ‘pukka vs dodgy’ like there used to be. Baracuta or Crombie vs market stall for example. Or Dolcis vs Bass? It used to be your mates that pointed out what was highest regarded. Now manufactures can tell you themselves. Might be some artistic license, but I suppose that’s marketing for you

Where were those Sebago AFS? I used to notice their own stores dotted around but they seem to have disappeared in recent years.

 

#30 2022-03-05 02:56:37

AFS
Member
Posts: 2740

Re: A Blue Penny Loafer

An independent shop called, I think, 'Project', in Belper.  I looked in, just the once, last autumn.  Bugger all at high prices.

 

#31 2022-03-05 03:08:52

Uncle Ian
Member
From: North London
Posts: 224

Re: A Blue Penny Loafer

Next sell Sebago, but only online. I bought a pair the other week to replace mine from about 20 years ago. No complaints - they look great.

 

#32 2022-03-05 03:21:05

Spendthrift
Member
Posts: 659

Re: A Blue Penny Loafer

Ah. I’ll make a point of cruising the independents round here. See what turns up.

Right back on point; presumably via the power of algorithms (whatever they are), my Pinterest feed this morning was full of blue loafers. Most of the outfits clearly didn’t work - “Look at my shoes everyone - THEY’RE BLUE!!’’  But a few looked okay. Not Ivy. Kind of pseudo French style. Light stonewash turned up jeans, no socks, stripe Tee. They stopped short of the pastel jumper casually draped over the shoulder. But you get the idea.

Last edited by Spendthrift (2022-03-05 03:40:29)

 

#33 2022-03-05 03:26:12

Spendthrift
Member
Posts: 659

Re: A Blue Penny Loafer

Sizing not changed then Uncle Ian? Mine are twenty odd years old and I’m happy with them. Always fancied a brown pair, but I’m not a fan of on line shopping generally, and can’t stand the idea when it comes to shoes in particular.

 

#34 2022-03-05 04:46:39

An Unseen Scene
Member
From: Nottingham, UK
Posts: 1265

Re: A Blue Penny Loafer

Online can be brilliant for buying, I just bought some stunning shoes direct from Sanders at only about 40% of their original price, that I'd never find in store no matter how hard I looked. Arrived within two days.

Also buying direct online will provide more of the proceeds to the manufacturer than indirect in store.

Last edited by An Unseen Scene (2022-03-05 04:49:17)

 

#35 2022-03-05 05:25:44

Spendthrift
Member
Posts: 659

Re: A Blue Penny Loafer

I’m not anti on line. See my name there? It’s true.

Opening the door to on line shopping would be the road to ruin and despair for me. Best left.

 

#36 2022-03-05 06:20:48

An Unseen Scene
Member
From: Nottingham, UK
Posts: 1265

Re: A Blue Penny Loafer

Fully understood!  Hope we are all well.

 

#37 2022-03-05 07:32:30

Uncle Ian
Member
From: North London
Posts: 224

Re: A Blue Penny Loafer

I had them delivered to the shop, so I could try them on, but my exact size was unavailable, so I had to put some toe-fillers in to stop them swishing about! Well made shoes though - if they last 20 years they'll definitely outlive me.

 

#38 2022-03-08 00:03:47

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

Re: A Blue Penny Loafer

Yes, black or brown leather shoes.

Blue or white is nice for canvas sneakers.


“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?"

 

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