Hi all.
Haven't posted on here for a long time. I'm mostly on Instagram these days. Mainly just because it works (pictures and everything!) While there I've allowed myself to open up to, or revisit, other 'ivy-esque' influences, and as I've always felt Talk Ivy works best when used by the 100% faithful, although I've checked in a lot, It's been better that I've just lurked and kept my mouth shut.
Anyway, those who gave up on Ivy Style after the highly questionable John Burton turned it into the internet version of an in flight magazine might not know that as of July 1st a new editor will be taking control.
Might be worth checking in when he's got his loafers under the desk - might not.
All the best all
Last edited by Spendthrift (2024-06-24 03:27:24)
Thanks for the tip off. I'm sure I'm not the only 1 on here to find IS to be of zero interest under present ownership, to the point where I don't even drop in every month or so. So I had no idea that it is about to change hands.
IS was probably a better commercial prospect a few years back, nonetheless I suspect that someone who knows ivy and how to write - i.e. the opposite of the present guy - could do very well with it. Good luck and best wishes to whoever it is who takes over. I for one will be happy to check in to see what he/she comes up with. The only way is up.
https://www.ivy-style.com/ivy-styles-new-editor-and-publisher-matthew-longcore.html
He's supposedly a friend of the present IS guy, which doesn't inspire confidence, regardless I think he'll do well.
I think under Chenners the overall width covered on IS was very good.
The combination of a new things worth checking out and snippets of Ivy history worked really well. I also liked that he would frequently get out and about and review stores and events.
There was also some very good contributions from Daniel Greenwood under the guise of Millennial Fogey. His take on Ivy Summer Clothing was a joy to read.
I can't fault the quality or quantity. It's such a shame that he had a beef with some of the UK Ivy guys. I don't think that he got that there could be a different take on the clothes if you took them out of the original US context.
I never felt the same about JB's writing. He worked to much narrower parameters. Sadly I think this was a result of his wife's health. We will never know if the site would have improved.
A very charitable assessment of Burton. I've already stated my opinion of him on previous threads.
Chens was sometimes a bit clueless about ivy clothing but he had a good idea of how to make the site successful and was very diligent. However it was always obvious that ivy was an uncomfortable fit for him. He certainly had some good years though.
I think that most of Chens’s negativity towards Brits stemmed from the trolling antics of the late
Jimmy Frost-Mellor in his various internet persona. He subjected Ivy Style to relentless provocation over several years and it eventually wore thin with Chens.
True to a certain extent however it went way deeper than that. To Chens, ivy's appeal was as a signifier of being part of the upper classes. Which has never been the ethos over here, and that used to disgust him. He also hated being associated with anything from the past, whereas many on here used to love a vintage ivy look.
Jim noted Chens' social-climbing ambitions and lack of subject knowledge of ivy clothing, and took the piss out of them. Relentless provocation? That's an understatement ha. Jim took it to an obsessive extreme, presumably as a result of his inner demons. But as I recall, it didn't take long for Chens' negativity towards Brits (and certain non-Brit posters on here) to manifest itself. In fact his thin-skinned nature was another of his weaknesses.
Chens was also encouraged by various posters on his comments pages who also found this forum disgusting. And there was a political side to all this which I won't get into.
Last edited by Yuca (2024-06-29 03:39:06)
Re CC Yuca has summed things up perfectly.
From a personal perspective, I didn't like his knocking of The Ivy Look book. There was no need to be so rude about it.
He simply refused to comprehend that in the UK an interest in Ivy clothing doesn't stem from elite colleges or the upper class. It's actually an interest fuelled simply by liking the style.
In the UK we have more than our fair share of traditions, rules and requirements when it comes to clothing.
^^ and funnily enough, where it seems our friends across the ponds are often seduced by those old inherited/reworked rules and class traditions, the 'coolness' of the ivy look - as I see it -was something of a subtle rejection of them, as embodied perfectly in the natural shoulder jacket and slouchy sack cut, that clothes were well-worn, crumpled, comfortable, not flashy, not-quite-so-easy to place. On that final point, I rarely talk about clothes with people (...there's far more important things to worry about...) but when it comes up, it's always fascinating how the ivy look can't be easily pinned down, familiar but not, smart but relaxed, subtle yet different
Last edited by colin (2024-07-02 06:15:43)
Yes, Colin., so right.
It's hard to pin down as elements of the look crossover into the mainstream, become fashionable for a short time and then dift into obscurity. Only then to be worn by the enthusiast.
I fell in love with all the little details - a flap pocket on a shirt , patch and flap sports jackets, surcingle belts and a brushed shetland. All so subtle they're hardly acknowledged by the herd.
Add in splash of madras, a side of seersucker and you have perfection
"He simply refused to comprehend that in the UK an interest in Ivy clothing doesn't stem from elite colleges or the upper class. It's actually an interest fuelled simply by liking the style."
He understood that very well. He just didn't like it. And he could explain that very well. That didn't suit the British here because they claimed sovereignty over interpretation for themselves. It was a mutual intolerance.
I can understand his point of view as well as the British one.
Ivy (and also Preppy) were originally the lifestyle of a very specific social group in the USA and still are today. To deny that is absurd. This lifestyle has never been “inclusive?? and never will be.
The style has a completely different history in Britain, becoming popular through working-class subcultures. For obvious reasons, the associated lifestyle did not play a role in these circles. The British equivalent of Ivy/Preppy in England in terms of class would have been the Sloane Rangers.
One could simply accept that there are these different approaches/interpretations. But maybe that would be too easy?
Maybe but I also think the same (or quite similar) clothes get worn quite differently...it's very subtle, but there's an edginess, non-stuffiness to the British take on the ivy look (to my eyes), precisely to push back (more or less explicitly) against those class connotations. For instance, if I wore a navy brooks blazer, (which I occasionally do), I've changed up the buttons so they're more muted, and would probably wear with a more interesting shirt (other than white/blue) or a slim repp tie, chinos with no break etc