ALDEN TASSEL LOAFERS:
https://aldenmadison.com/product-category/shoes/tassel-moccasins/
Tassel
loafers are one of the youngest models of all classic footwear, and it came to
be after a commision from a well-known actor to the American brand Alden. Here
is the story of the emergence of the tassel loafer.
https://shoegazing.com/2019/07/29/history-tassel-loafers/
Just as
many are shocked that we are becoming more and more informal nowadays, the
situation was the same during the first half of last century. And just like
now, it was younger part of the population who pushed this development, then
perhaps most of all college and university youth in, for example, the United
States and England. In the 1930s between the World Wars, American college
youngsters adopted a version of a slip-on shoe that Norwegian fishermen used,
which came to be called penny loafers (more about its history in later posts,
at all, the Norwegian shoe industry has had major impact in several areas for
classic shoes). The interesting part with younger shoe models is that you often
have more facts and details on the birth of the shoes, which is the case with
the tassel loafer, for example several quotes from the CEO of Alden at the
time, Robert Clark, which Bruce Boyer included in a fine essay on the tassel in
a 1998 issue of the Cigar Aficianado magazine.
The one who
set the ball rolling for the birth of the tassel loafers was the Hungarian
actor Paul Lukas, who won an Oscars in 1943 for his role in the movie Watch on
the Rhine. He had bought a pair of oxfords at home in Europe that had small
leather tassels at the end of the laces. Lukas wanted to make his own version
of the shoe, and in 1948 went to the New York firm Farkas & Kovacs, which
made a variant where the lacing also ran along the shoe’s opening. Paul Lukas
thought the shoes design were great, but they were a bad fit. So he went on and
took the right shoe to another New York company, Lefcourt, and the left shoe to
Los Angeles-based Morris Shoemakers. Oddly enough, both of these turned to
reputable, already large, shoe company Alden.
Here they
made a change on the model made by Farkas & Kovacs, ignored making a
lace-up shoe but took the penny loafer with their apron as a base, made it on a
comfortable round last, and put the leather strap with the tassels around the
opening now only as decoration. Voilà, the first tassel loafer had seen the
light of day, and Paul Lukas was very pleased.
Alden
realised the potential of the model, a shoe of casual elegance, which worked in
both informal and more formal contexts. In 1950, it was introduced in their
line-up, where the stores Lefcourt and Morris had exclusive premiere of it.
They instantly sold like hot cakes, not least then among the Ivy League
students who saw it as a slightly more formal version of the penny, and within
a couple of years Alden had tassel loafers in 20 different leather variants.
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