(This might be fun to do...)
Where have you come from?
Where are you now?
Where are you heading next?
I came from English "Trad" to American Ivy League. Next I'm looking far more at that "American in Paris" vibe I talk about than anything else.
You?
Ok I'll give this a go..I came from, well a long journey with some side roads that turned out to be Cul-de-Sac's, but main roads that led me to here were:
Came from Mod, then 50's style, sometimes mashing these styles and styles of the day, some lost periods (usually more of the style of the day than sticking with what I know and like best) also its funny how lost periods of style coincide and reflect lost periods in life?
Am now here with a wardrobe that has winks to mod and Ivy in the main. (funny I was listening to a record the other day and for some reason I remembered an outfit I used to wear from that year -79- of Desert boots, Beige straight trousers with minimal break, Blue OCBD and natural harrington (cheap version not a G9) and I thought how its basically what I sometimes still wear now, timeless and definately the Ivy end of Mod at the time.
Where am I going...well funny really but I've been tempted to hit the loft to find some original light grey Amercan cuffed trousers that I loved in the 80's, but I fear they wouldn't fit me now, but hey Russel they'd fit that American in Paris vibe. Now thats a look with no break. Both Gene and Fred loved that no break look at times. Guess it looked good dancing! Nah I'm happy where I am, my evolution has been in far smaller increments over past years. But I still like things to have some comtempary feel too, and trying to achieve that is a challenge I enjoy. (I might start another thread on that???)
A very nice style story. Thanks.
... I made up 'Fogey' based on my early days for AAAC. I've never been banned from LL & I engineered my serial bannings from AA purely to draw attention to myself. Tony Ventresca made up the term iGent. 'Sloane Ranger' was just journalism as was 'Young Fogey' in the 80's. It's all as fake as 'Preppy' was in the US. My AAAC 'Fogey'stuff was just a tease.
Best -
i suppose indie was my first very conscious style route..days spent in hoxton and brick lane(there's a lot of tweed around there, you know) but more often up the west end.
then mod but still with kind of indie leanings...i wore trousers(13/14inch bottoms) and shoes(black winklepickers, though i did have a white pair at one point) and shirts more as a way to be different rather than because i really appreciated the clothes if you know what i mean. but then i really began to love clothes and style, i obsessed and kind of still do.
now i appreciate a few styles...mod of course (still wear my adam of london suit quite a bit) for smarter occasions, ivy and preppy(it may be "fake" but it's still pretty good looking) are influences for more casual times...though i am interested in getting some ivy styled suits/jackets.
also, lots of my friends wear the preppy we have in britain (think jack wills etc.) so i suppose i have leanings towards that too.
also have family in the country so i spend a lot of time there so tweed, hunter wellies and barbour jackets feature strongly in my wardrobe(infact in my whole families wardrobe).
i think i've just listed influences...no matter :]
A great Style Journey I pulled off The Weejun's excellent blog:
"This blog is a personal journey around that indefinable something that delineates a kind of American ideal that appears to never change, but does it subtle ways, and touches on its relatives the Italian look, from the 50s and 60s, as well as the mod interpretion from this side of the big pond.
Back in 1979 at the tender age of 14 I became a Mod. At that age six months was an eternity and I was proud to have been a mod when they were very few others let alone fourteen year olds. I remember being hugely influenced by a big spread in the NME about the style and the music. Soon, within a few months of the 2 Tone launch the whole thing became a cliche. Mods were kids out shopping with their mums and the whole thing was over. Except that it wasn’t, really. It was only just beginning.
For me and many others in those long ago pre-Internet days that brief flash began an affair with the roots of that style. Where had it come from? Italy certainly, a little Parisian style definitely, but mostly it came from America - the land of movies and of modern jazz.
Soon the fifties american look took over. By 15 I was imitating the older kids from London that used to travel to Bournemouth every bank holiday and were a walking style lesson. Again the common denominator was American style.
When I was 16 I moved to London to pursue a career as a jazz musician. My best friend moved there too, but I made the mistake of playing the double bass - hugely hip but stupidly big to carry around the streets of Warwick Avenue and Ladbroke Grove, whilst my colleague played the just as hip and light as a feather, flute.
At 17 I was working in Covent Garden and dressing entirely from Flip in Long Acre. You need to remember that it was virtually impossible to buy classic American clothes new in those days, especially on £60pw before tax.
I had already bought my first pair of Bass Weejuns from Bob Lusk’s Natural Shoe Store for £44.50. That was a fortune in 1983 - a whole week’s wages. Having made my mind up that I absolutely had to have them I went in to buy them, only to find that they didn’t have them in the Neal St store. There was a pair they could hold in World’s End, an hours bus ride away that would mean not returning to work after lunch and risking the sack. Well, if you’ve read this far you will know that the next day I was wearing those oxblood Weejuns to work. Luckily no one had noticed my absence.
Then one lunch time I was walking around Covent Garden and discovered a tiny dark shop that shone like a
beacon in the forest of 80s glam that was Covent Garden in 1983. In the window were the clothes I had seen in my favourite movies. Seersucker suits as worn by Anthony Perkins in W.U.S.A, button down oxford cloth shirts where the collars had a roll to them (unlike the appalling shirts in British high st stores that just had buttons added to the collar points), and incredibly, Halrin chinos with a flat front - a daring notion in those multi pleated days.
The store was J Simons. I went in and spent £24.50 on a Sero ‘The Purist’ short sleeve blue button down shirt. Suddenly I had a shirt just like the thirft store examples from Flip but with all the correct buttons and without the collar having been worn to within an inch of its life. And so began a long, long journey of attempting the impossible - to recreate some mythical era, a fleeting look seen in movies, jazz record sleeves, the pages of National Geographic, that was somewhere between 1957 and 1965; a journey that 25 years later I realise I will never quite finish. But with the internet, ebay, and the wealth of knowledge available at a click, it’s never been more fun or more easy to seek out that classic americana."
Legitimate enthusiasm always shines through and legitimacy is something the Weejun seems to have in spades.
Last edited by Hard Bop Hank (2009-02-27 11:23:59)
That's probably the coolest post you ever did HBH !
Thanks! It was probably a little bit like what I'd like to view my style journey nowadays... I guess, I took some shortcuts in hindsight...
Ahhhh The Lower Third......saw a shoe not too disimilar to Daves today, it was a Hush puppie in beige suede with a leather band between the sole and upper........was sleeping on whether to get them or not, that pic might just swing it for me, if they fit?......Ah, Can't Help Thinking 'Bout Me!
i won't copy hbh's idea - as much as i'd love to - so, to put it very short:
hardcore punk; mohawks stud jackets & all that -> rude boy / (not so, really) smart skin -> indie -> acid house / madchester / baggy -> casual baggy scruff / dope head (music: funk, soul, jazz, hip hop, house what have you) -> smarten up / quit smoking dope - > suedehead -> finding the joys of ivy & becoming less subcultural
mine:
age 13, 2-tone tho I didnt really have the correct gear, just listened to the music and made do with what I thought was proper gear
up to age 16 punk/hardcore
16-19 "oi oi skinhead"
at 20, smart/traditional skinhead
at 28 50s traditional rockabilly/Ted style (wore lots of vintage during this time)
at 32, back to traditional skinhead/suedehead tho in truth more like what Heikki said, no subcultural baggage attached..but cut my hair short again, no more pomp
Never "a mod" but always had mod leanings due to the whole smart skinhead influence. And even during my rockabilly years, I still wore and bought traditional skinhead styled gear in addition to 50s vintage
From 1995-now, severe Paul Smith addict.