Wednesday, 20 October 2010

VINTAGE MODEL ... 'Gothick' ? ... or just the wife of Sir Cristopher 'Dracula' Lee ? ...


Lee has her sights firmly on the future. And along with top model Hannelore Knuts, she tackles the camera once agai
We have stopped time. And invited into a fantastic garden - in every sense of the word - two stately beauties. Lady Birgit Lee and the iconic Belgian model Hannelore Knuts did not know each other and met through Tim Walker during a shoot.

There is no story to tell, but rather a meeting, a moment suspended between nostalgia for the future and a nod to the past. Lady Lee and damsel Hannelore are sisters of style, icons of a certain idea of elegance, which is both understated and dramatic. And before the clock started going back, we asked a few questions to Lady Lee.

"Don't waste your time: get on with it!". Lady Birgit Lee - her friends call her Gitte, short for Brigitte - has very clear ideas on how to deal with life: things need to be done by putting all one has into them. "I realize that the worst aspect of aging is that you have less time to do all the things you have not yet done. That is, you're running against time, knowing from the outset that it's a lost battle".

Maria Grazia Meda, Vogue Italia, October 2010 (n. 722), p. 344-353



DAVID NIVEN TRIBUTE

DAVID NIVEN ... THE LAST GENTLEMAN










Monday, 11 October 2010

American Sartorial Myth...J. Press New Haven


J. Press is a men's clothier in the United States. Founded in 1902 in New Haven, Connecticut, by Jacobi Press, the company now operates stores in three additional locations: New York, New York, Washington, D.C., and Cambridge, Massachusetts. J. Press formerly had branches in San Francisco and Princeton, New Jersey. The original New Haven location remains the company's largest store.Since its founding, J. Press' clothing has remained much the same. For example, the company produces the vast majority of its off-the-rack jackets in the traditional "three-button sack" style rarely found today in America, and for the most part, only produces plain-front trousers, for which the company suggests a traditional 1 3/4" cuff. Fabrics are generally subdued, except for traditionally bright-colored items such as casual trousers and sweaters. Its neckties bear traditional repp stripe, foulard, and paisley motifs. They also carry scarves and ties featuring motifs and colors for Ivy League schools, including Yale's Skull and Bones Society. J. Press dress overcoats are of lambswool, cashmere, or camel hair, or of herringbone tweed with a velvet collar in the Chesterfield style. In 2000, J. Press expanded its sales to the World Wide Web, through which it offers most of its line, as of 2007.
New Haven StoreJ. Press often is said to carry on a traditional Ivy League style of men's clothing.[2] Little-known outside of New England and the East Coast, J. Press caters most to an old-fashioned preppy subculture that eschews popular culture trends. The company makes an effort not to outsource the production of its clothing to developing countries or to use synthetic materials in its line. In May 2007, J. Press opened a new flagship store at 380 Madison Avenue in New York City.[1] According to The Preppy Handbook, the former store, on 44th Street between Fifth and Madison Avenues, was chosen because it was equidistant from the Harvard and Yale clubs {wikipedia)







Sunday, 10 October 2010

THE GREAT "PREPPY" REVOLUTION ... BIG FUSS ABOUT NOTHING IN THE "W.A.S.P." UNIVERSUM

Lately the Preppy World and the Wasp Universum have been very excited and nervous ... after the reedition of the mythic "Take Ivy" in English and the edition of the new "Preppy Handbook / True Preppy" by Lisa Birnbach, now, a new Ivy League-Preppy-WASP "Guide"is published by two British Authors: "The Ivy Look".

Studying the Preppy look and its reference points
Jul 25, 2010


NEW YORK - JUST like European currency, European men's wear has been in the dumps lately.
Suddenly all that rigorous, over-designed and unwearable stuff cranked out by Raf Simons and his ilk seems as inadvertently retro as a Eurail Pass.
American style, on the other hand, is staging a comeback, belaying itself hand-over-hand out of the crevasse it fell into a decade ago, just as spunky Tommy Hilfiger and the sturdy little American dollar seem to have done.
Signs of this are visible not only in the brisk business Ralph Lauren's new restaurant in Paris is doing selling le hamburger to the French (whose not-so-secret secret for staying slender, if you will forgive the digression, is cigarettes: in Paris even dogs and infants smoke) or even in the flurry of prepublication attention generated by 'True Prep: It's a Whole New World,' the follow-up to the best-seller 'The Official Preppy Handbook,' published in 1980.
Since last year, when, as David Colman noted in these pages, a new age dawned of label-archaeology, designers have been relentlessly scouring the back pages of American sportswear for all things homegrown - the more obscure, hand-crafted, fuddy-duddy and arcane the better.
Ray-Bans were suddenly on a list of Old School must-haves and so were wool vests from the Filson, and Red Wing boots and Alden loafers and Gitman oxford cloth shirts and Sperry Top-Siders and Quoddy moccasins.
Designers as varied as Thom Browne, Scott Sternberg of Band of Outsiders, Billy Reid and Frank Muytjens of J. Crew all made hay with the conservative classics.
The style became so ubiquitous that, the designer Michael Bastian said, 'The whole preppy machine requires a recalibration.' It has become 'a reference to a reference,' Bastian added.
And, as it happens, few in the fashion business would have much trouble naming the precise source of the numerous fashion 'references' he had in mind.
'Take Ivy,' a slender volume of photographs, commissioned by Kensuke Ishizu, the founder of an Ivy League-inspired clothing line called Van Jacket, was first published in 1965, the yield of a fact-finding trip taken by a Japanese photographer and three writers to Ivy League campuses.
Part style manual for Japanese fans of American 'trad' style and, somewhat inadvertently, an ethnographic study, 'Take Ivy' went on to become, in the decades since publication, the nearly unattainable center of a passionate cult.
People spent years hunting down rare copies. They traded them online for prices that reached into the thousands. They photocopied and distributed them in design studios like fashion samizdat.
'When I first started at J. Press and went to Japan, they had an original copy there and I flipped out,' said Mark McNairy, the designer of New Amsterdam, who formerly worked neo-retro wonders at the venerable label J. Press.
'I got them to photocopy the whole book for me and I used that for a couple years,' he added. 'Then a men's magazine in Japan did a limited reissue and sent me one as a Christmas gift.'
McNairy hoarded that copy until the day his wife wanted a costly new handbag. 'Then I sold it on eBay at the height of when everybody was going crazy for it.'
Time, it develops, has done little to dim the allure of 'Take Ivy,' with its guileless snapshots of handsome, fit and presumably bright young lugs disporting themselves in dining halls, on the College Green at Dartmouth, along Nassau Street in Princeton and in Harvard Yard.
'More influential as a myth or Holy Grail that no one could get their hands on,' than as an actual object of use, according to Bastian, 'Take Ivy' nevertheless once occupied a treasured position on his assistant's desk when that particular designer was toiling for Ralph Lauren.
'He used to have a pack of Xeroxes and was one of those people who passed 'Take Ivy' around in back alleys for a long time.'
Not long after the blogger John Tinseth scanned the book and posted the pages on his site, The Trad, a slew of new collections suddenly appeared with 'Take Ivy' as their 'inspiration.'
In Tokihito Yoshida's spring 2011 collection for Woolrich Woolen Mills, the designer was, he said, 'oddly influenced by the work of forward thinking Japanese photographer, T. Hayashida,' and the book.
Starting next week it anyone with $24.95 will be able to experience the 'odd' influence of 'Take Ivy' when, for the first time in 45 years, the book is reprinted (powerhouse Books) with an English language text.
Not surprisingly that text, indecipherable to any but Japanese readers all these years, is equally awed and bemused by the folkways of idealized Ivy Leaguers with 'their sound minds and bodies,' their letter-sweaters and their leafy, cloistered campuses still dominated in those chummy sex-segregated days by men.
'Men's clothing in Japan in those days was very wannabe,' Hajime Hasegawa, one of the book's authors, said last week by telephone from Japan.
Explaining why it was that the owners of Van Jacket sent three writers and the photographer Teruyoshi Hayashida on a fact-finding tour of Eastern college campuses, Hasegawa explained: 'Men in Japan were just drab clones of each other in the postwar period. The US was the big thing, the big ideal.'
The team took 'tens of thousands' of pictures, Hasegawa said, of handsome young Ivy League men in slim-fitting flat front khakis, madras Bermuda shorts, anoraks, blue button-down Oxford cloth shirts and ... well, essentially all the stuff you'd see in a current J. Crew catalogue.
'I was always obsessed with that book,' said Muytjens, creative director of J. Crew, which will sell 'Take Ivy' in both limited and mass market editions at its men's wear stores. 'Even though it is old hat now for people in the design world, it is so completely valid, still.'
What, after all, is the appeal of 'Take Ivy,' sartorial or otherwise? Is it just nostalgia?
Is it the vision of a bygone world populated by young men who, as the writer Malcolm Gladwell once noted, were sometimes selected by admissions officers as much on the basis of patrician beauty as an elevated IQ?
Is it the fantasy of upper-class belonging, the one Ralph Lauren has parlayed into a multibillion-dollar empire?
'The reality is the people in that book at that time went to schools and belonged to clubs that most ordinary people couldn't get into,' said Lisa Birnbach, an author of 'The Official Preppy Handbook' and 'True Prep.'
''Take Ivy,'' Birnbach said, is a ruling class 'look book,' a template for any budding Jay Gatsby.
Of course the preppy look now signifies little in terms of class.
Everybody's a preppy when all it takes now to achieve the appearance of having descended from generations of Groton men is a flipped collar, a pair of Top-Siders and checkered shorts.
'It's just fashion now,' Birnbach said. ''Take Ivy' and I are guilty for having ruined it all.' -- AP