Last edited by Moose Maclennan (2008-08-20 07:31:57)
probably really boring, sorry, its got to be some old white oxford cloth shirts i got from my uncle. the collars are all frayed as are the cuffs, but its the softest shirt i have
Some classic sweaters my mother knit for me when I was back in prep school 50 years ago.
Quite beautifully worn-in and rumpled if i may say so, Brideshead.The contrast of the smallish white flower with green stalk visible in the lapel buttonhole is inspired. Set against the navy silk pocket square it adds a nice pleasing whimsy and flair.
I can really feel the love! I like it!
far from ivy league, but - er - americana nevertheless are these two items:
a very old, battered, scruffy (has-been-black) m 65 jacket bought in the early nineties. i still wear it occasionally when taking my dogs for autumn walks or when goin g fishing to the turku archipelago on autumn weekends.
a battered mustard-colour carhartt zip hoodie, also from very early nineties. also wear it once, twice a year when walking my dogs.
also, my old, faithful 8 eyelet black soft cap doc marten boots from i don't remember when are in occasiuonall use. they are still highly polished, though, but will fall apart any day now. probably, for nostalgy reasons, i'm about to buy a pair of cherry reds to replace these.
No, a NICE touch, Mate...!!!!
Cheers,
John
A Brooks Brothers tennis sweater with moth holes on the left shoulder.
An old RL long sleeved button down in a rather pleasing mix of pale blues, pinks and greens. Too small now really with frayed cuffs and collar but gets an airing now and then when popping to the shops for the morning paper.
A 1962 h.i.s. Ivy League drab olive herringbone tweed jacket - all details bang on perfect. It should be in a museum rather than on my back but I can't resist it. It's my baby and I dig it out 3 or 4 times a year to get that old tingle again before putting it back to rest until the following Autumn. Acquired from Flip circa 1988 in the days when there were, literally, racks of these things hanging up. Did this really happen or have I imagined it? Madras, seersucker, Izod Lacoste, harringtons...they really were all there weren't they? Sadly this absolute masterpiece of 20th century menswear is now looking its age and is no longer really cutting a dash - the material has lost its vigour, and the whole thing looks a little old and floppy, a bit like its wearer. But I'll always love it. It has a symbolic presence in my wardrobe, representing as it does 'the ideal'.
Flip in Long Acre...... anyone remember the tie 'barrel'? bought a few slim-knits out of there 10-50p each, I think. Still got a blue one with 3 flying geese embroidered on it!
Last edited by Chris_H (2008-09-18 06:34:32)
I used to visit Flip in Edinburgh and Glasgow between 85-88ish. Lots of bowling shirts, varsity jackets, Western stuff, endless racks of wrecked 501s, brothel creepers. More of a Rockabilly vibe about the place as far as I remember.
They carried new stuff too; I'm pretty sure that's where I bought my Harrington.
I got a few Harringtons from Flip in Glasgow. One was particularly beautiful - natural colour with a brown tartan lining - lost it at Punx Picnic in about 87, I was devastated. Got a London Fog mac in there too that was too big for me so I gave it to my Dad who loved it. It still makes me feel a bit sad thinking of how terrible the shop ended up, full of goth/skateboard tat.
I remember a pair of madras shorts I got there, couple of baseball jackets too ah happy days.
An interesting thread, well worth reviving. I've just been thinking of my old Scottish-made L.L.Bean cardigan, worn, holed, patched, darned for ten years... The Alan Paine cashmere v-neck slung over the back of a nearby chair... Several recently acquired herringbone jackets, all well-worn, inexpensive, awaiting their moment... Many of my Brooks shirts have frayed collars and cuffs but I keep on wearing them... An old USA-made Baggie denim shirt has two holes in the back...
In fact, this chimes in with something TRS said about the old London Ivyists not simply buying and buying for the sake of it but WEARING their clothing, really wearing it...