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#1 2009-04-13 08:08:30

Marc Grayson
Member
Posts: 8860

Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

For me, as a teenager, maybe even a bit earlier, seeing a magazine ad for a product I don't even recall, but, I fixated on the guy's jeans in the ad, and, thought I had to have them.  Also, seeing Robert Klein, in his early years, wearing saddle shoes, prompting me to have my mother take me around to every shoe store in the neighborhood desperately seeking saddle shoes.  Finally found them, and, wore them with the jeans.  I also remember an early appreciation of desert boots.


"‘The sense of being perfectly well dressed gives a feeling of inner tranquility which even religion is powerless to bestow." Ralph Waldo Emerson
"Looking good and dressing well is a necessity. Having a purpose in life is not."  Oscar Wilde

 

#2 2009-04-13 08:26:23

formby
Member
From: Wiseacre
Posts: 8359

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

For me it was when I started high school. Kids fashion in the North West of England around this time was greatly influenced by fashion trends emanating from the football terraces. Liverpool FC were very much in the ascendency and the fans who used to follow them on their annual forays onto the continent for their European Cup games would hunt down obscure sports brands or items not available in the British market. Boys being boys, this obviously lead to a kind of one-upmanship on who could find/buy the most obscure item.

As a teenager I was more into casual wear as most teenagers are...


"Dressing, like painting, should have a residual stability, plus punctuation and surprise." - Richard Merkin

Souvent me Souvient

 

#3 2009-04-13 09:49:38

Popeye Doyle
Member
Posts: 1099

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

Jr. High School in Mpls. c. 1961.  Gant shirts (with the famous loop on the back pleat) most desirable, Sero allowable, nothing else really considered. Tough fit when you have a neck size of about 12.  We were also wearing garters with our stockings, and I think Florsheim Imperial Wing tips were worth owning, esp. shell cordovan models.  This was just for schoolwear. I don't remember anything more formal or any other sartorial idiocies. I think we were called "Baldies", or aspired to be called that. Mpls. was really backwoods in those days, one laughable skyscraper and the closest Brooks Bros. in Chicago.


"All in all they are a pretty sleazy bunch."
                                            --Cruiser
"Can one safely bone the cordovan of the dead?"
                                            --Quay

 

#4 2009-04-13 09:54:34

Just Jim
Member
Posts: 1159

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

Harrogate, 13, when I made my first plan...

 

#5 2009-04-13 10:37:20

Rhythm and Blues
Member
From: London
Posts: 84

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

i love stories... why couldnt my parents have had me 50 years before they did

here's mine...winning the sixth form best dressed boy 2008 and '09

 

#6 2009-04-13 11:35:55

Just Jim
Member
Posts: 1159

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

 

#7 2009-04-13 11:58:34

Rhythm and Blues
Member
From: London
Posts: 84

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

watch it bruv

 

#8 2009-04-13 13:19:21

Chris Kavanaugh
Member
From: Westlake Village California
Posts: 271

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

My mother took me one winter to buy a suit for my cousin's wedding.
I was wearing a knit turtleneck. The salesman commented on what a unusual look it made.
The next season saw the brief turtleneck fad with everybody looking like a U Boat reunion.

A few years later, I wore my uncles blue melton navy bellbottoms to school and promptly got stomped on by the peg leg levi 501 orthodoxy, probably why I hate the cruiser school of fine dress to this day.

I returned from a summer far removed from world affairs ( a early foray into religious retreat) to the post 'Summer of Love' in 1969. All the peg legs had been changed out for- bellbottoms.

This taught me  the unfairness and fleeting nature of 'fashion' and I retreated to a world of Conway greating Chang on the mountain plateau in a 3 piece suit and coat in lieu of the Beatles going to India.

Last edited by Chris Kavanaugh (2009-04-13 13:20:54)


" Fallacies do not cease to be fallacies because they become fashion. "

G.K. Chesterton

 

#9 2009-04-13 16:41:08

rsmeyer
Member
From: Chevy Chase, MD
Posts: 751

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

Reading Frazier's "The Art Of Wearing Clothes" just before I started College-haven't changed a whit since.

 

#10 2009-04-14 01:09:23

Just Jim
Member
Posts: 1159

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

 

#11 2009-04-14 06:53:49

BrightYoungThing
Member
Posts: 27

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

 

#12 2009-04-14 06:56:49

Tony Ventresca
Member
Posts: 5132

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

 

#13 2009-04-14 07:05:50

BrightYoungThing
Member
Posts: 27

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

 

#14 2009-04-14 12:16:14

Bishop of Briggs
Member
Posts: 3948

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

I don't consider myself sartorially obsessed.


Contrary to lies of FNB and Woofboxer, I (and most of the other "Buff Bastards") have been banned from posting on this forum. There are only a few posters left so don't waste your time on here. This forum is dead and nobody cares.

 

#15 2009-04-14 13:11:36

Chris Kavanaugh
Member
From: Westlake Village California
Posts: 271

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

O.K. when did you start paying attention to your clothing?

I'm watching a programme on California wines.

They were talking about methods today we would call organic.

Only our viticulturalists are calling it 'biodynamics.'

My grandfather called it farming.

Sartorially Obsessed does have a jungian ring to it.

I love the smell of lincoln shoe polish in the morning. It has the smell of- victory.

Last edited by Chris Kavanaugh (2009-04-14 13:13:14)


" Fallacies do not cease to be fallacies because they become fashion. "

G.K. Chesterton

 

#16 2009-04-15 20:47:33

The_Shooman
A pretty face
From: AUSTRALIA
Posts: 13195

Re: Your Earliest Remembrance Of Being Sartorially Obsessed

l was sartorially obsessed with the plainest black leather soled dress-shoos before l could walk. Wanted a black captoe oxford throughout all of my childhood.

Actually, my earliest memory was sneaking out my dads dress shoos at 3 years old. My parents later told me about all the shoo-antics l got up to as a baby. Got some old photo's somewhere.

Last edited by The_Shooman (2009-04-16 04:19:16)

 

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