Tuesday, 24 March 2026
Monday, 23 March 2026
HORNETS AGAIN AND AGAIN ... FOREVER
There's a chap who virtually dresses me at a shop called Hornets. It's a second-hand Gent's clothing shop in Kensington Church Walk. Full of Saville Row suits and weird and wonderful military dress jackets. The shoes have been resoled so many times I've propbably paid five times as much in repairs as I did originally. They're from Hornets; they're Carvillle. The company strapline is "The shop for the amorous man", which is slightly creepy. Clothes are a mechanism of communication - people are adept at reading clothes, and you can manipulate that. Wear a bicorn hat or a hussars jacket to a party and everyone will pay attention.; My style icon Toad from The Wind in the Willows.By Sam Bompas
Hornets 2 & 4 Kensington Church Walk , London W8 4NB
36b Kensington Church Street , London W8 4BX










Sunday, 22 March 2026
Adieu Bill.
We heard from friends the very sad news of the death
of "Bill Hornets" (William Wilde).
Bill had dinner once in our house when he was
visiting Tommy Page in Amsterdam.
Bill The
Guv'nor was an important figure and character in London daily life.
He played a very important role in the Vintage
London scene offering the highest quality of clothing for men. He has always refused
the concept and phenomenon of Vintage saying always that he was a Secondhand
clothes dealer and seller.
He was the proud owner of three fabulous little
shops in Kensington.
He always remains in our memory and will never be
forgotten by us.
Adieu Bill. May your soul rest in peace and that
you will find the light that you always aspired with your continuous search for
quality.
Sérgio and Trudie.
"Bill Hornets" (William Wilde) was a
well-known figure in Kensington's vintage scene, noted for his three stores on
Kensington Church Street and Church Walk, specializing in classic men's style.
While an Instagram post in April 2025 by Hornets
Kensington announced the sad death of a team member named Chris Bannon (signed
by #billhornets), Bill Wilde himself was still actively linked to the business
in a Standard article from September 2025.
In Memoriam: To Bill with our warmest regards and the best memories of London Sérgio (JEEVES) & Trudie / The Hornets in Kensington Offers London Men Style, Not Fashion
Friday, 20 March 2026
Laurence Fellows (1885–1964) was a pioneering illustrator whose work in the 1930s and 1940s was crucial in defining modern male fashion illustration, particularly through his contributions to Apparel Arts (the precursor to GQ) and Esquire.
Laurence
Fellows (1885–1964) was a pioneering illustrator whose work in the 1930s and
1940s was crucial in defining modern male fashion illustration, particularly
through his contributions to Apparel Arts (the precursor to GQ) and Esquire.
His illustrations were essential for shifting men's fashion away from
simplistic advertising toward a sophisticated, detailed, and aspirational
aesthetic that portrayed men as stylish, affluent, and at ease.
Importance
of Fellows' Work:
Detailed
Fabric and Texture Representation: Fellows was renowned for his ability to
expertly depict the weight, texture, and drape of fabrics, including flannels,
worsteds, tweeds, and linens, making the clothing the "star" of the
image.
Creating
"Casual Elegance": His art captured a specific, relaxed masculinity,
showing men in comfortable, well-tailored clothes that were both refined and
unstudied, setting a standard for "casual elegance".
Influencing
Lifestyle Imagery: Instead of using underfed models, Fellows portrayed mature,
dapper men in realistic, opulent settings—such as hosting parties, traveling,
or at clubs—making the depicted lifestyle and fashion aspirational and
accessible to readers.
Bridging
Style and Fashion: During a time when many men had limited wardrobes, Fellows'
work helped transform the focus from fast-changing trends to lasting personal
style, highlighting the importance of well-fitting, classic pieces.
Enduring
Legacy: His contributions were so significant that his 1930s illustrations
remain a key reference for vintage menswear, with his work influencing
contemporary interest in suits, tweed, and tailored looks. He was posthumously
inducted into the Society of Illustrators Hall of Fame in 2009.
Fellows'
work was particularly vital because of the limited supply of male fashion
artists at the time, making his distinct style a dominant force in shaping how
men's fashion was visualized and marketed during that era.
Laurence Fellows

This is the only photograph I was able to find in my search in the Internet ...namely a group Photo of Young American Artists ( Wikipedia).The "blow up" of Laurence Fellows was made by the "blogger" Maxminimus, in Maxminimus.blogspot.
Young American Artists of the Modern School, L. to R. Jo Davidson, Edward Steichen, Arthur B. Carles, John Marin; back: Marsden Hartley, Laurence Fellows, c. 1911, Bates College Museum of Art

(1885 - 1964)
From the Gay Nineties up through the 1920s, American humor magazines played a greater social role than is generally appreciated. Their candor in recording the current events in a satirical weekly or monthly forum presented the contemporary American attitudes, prejudices, and mores in the guise of humor that was not found in the more sober mainstream periodicals. Publications such as Truth, Life, Puck, Leslie's, and Judge showcased the talents of such major illustrators as Charles Dana Gibson, James Montgomery Flagg, Orson Lowell, T.S. Sullivant, Peter Newell, Art Young, and many others who mirrored the country's foibles in their enthusiastic ridicule.
Joining the group in the early teens was an ultra sophisticated young artist named Laurence Fellows. A native of Pennsylvania, Fellows had received his training at the Philadelphia Academy of Art, with several follow-up years studying in England and in France at the Academie Julien under J.P. Laurens.
Upon his return to the United States, Fellows' fresh point of view, particularly reflecting a French/Vogue influence, found him a ready audience. His style was distinguished by a thin outline, flat tonality or color, with the emphasis on shapes rather than details. Just as quickly, however, he acquired many imitators. Before John Held, Jr., for instance, had invented his "flapper," he was clearly adapting much from Fellows' mannered drawing style into his own submitted gags. Other new converts were Hal Burroughs, Bertram Hartman, and Ralph Barton, who would each run with it in their own way. Fellows particularly liked to play with off-balanced compositions, even in the more conservative arena of illustration for advertising.
One of his early commercial clients was Kelly-Springfield Tires, which gave him the opportunity to combine his elegant draftsmanship with the clever, humorous copy depreciating the competition, thus often violating the rule against "negative" advertising. But Fellows' drawing and the copy had an edge of good humor that attracted a national following and the successful campaign lasted for many years.
In the thirties, Fellows gradually shifted his emphasis to fashion art, including both men and women, finding clients in Vanity Fair, Vogue, Cosmopolitan, The American Magazine, and McClure's. He also became a regular contributor to Apparel Arts magazine.
With only a limited number of men's fashion artists available, Fellows was most in demand for the male-focused subjects, particularly by the newly launched Esquire magazine in the thirties, where he was regularly featured in full-color spreads for many years.
Although Fellows considered himself a commercial illustrator, he was also a painter who exhibited periodically, later concentrating on abstractions. In reviewing his entire career, however, it is his early work, when he found a fresh viewpoint in a sophisticated spoof of the social upper crust, that makes us admire his audacity and leaves us with a smile of appreciation.
Walt Reed

"Fellows was born in Ardmore, Pennsylvania in 1885. He was trained in illustration at the Pennsylvania Academy of Art, and honed his trademark “continental” style studying in England and France. But the real story begins when he returned to the States in the early 1910s and burst on the scene as an eager and talented young artist.
Fellows found work contributing to satirical magazines like Life and Leslie’s, and his European-influenced style was fresh and new, reflecting the sleekness and stylization that led to Art Deco. His work was so fresh, in fact, that he found many of his better-known contemporaries, including John Held, Jr. and Ralph Barton, were adapting his stylistic elements for their own use.
Fellows’ style during this period was very mannered and graphic, with thin black outlines enclosing flat expanses of tone and compositions that emphasized graphic weight and balance over fussy illustrative detail. His bread and butter throughout the 1920s was his work for the Kelly-Springfield Tire company. He brought an idea to the Kelly advertising manager for a series of magazine ads featuring “smart cars and smart types of people.” It was the beginning of an assignment that lasted for nearly a decade. The ads are still smart and fashionable today (and becoming collectible, by the way).
But it was in the 1930s that Fellows found the niche that would shape the lives of dandies for the next 80 years: fashion illustration. Though he contributed to Vanity Fair, McClure’s, and The American Magazine, among other publications, it was men’s fashion where he was most in demand, and Apparel Arts, aimed at the tailoring trade, and Esquire were his showcases.
Fellows’ technique as a fashion illustrator was more painterly and detailed than his earlier commercial work. The man could draw fabric, plain and simple. His fabric had weight, heft, drape, texture, and sheen. His flannels, worsteds, tweeds, and linens, his barathea and velvet and twill were all fabulous.
He also defined a very specific, very masculine world. Unlike today’s fashion magazines, Apparel Arts didn’t dictate fashion trends by using underfed models in unwearable suits. It showed what was already being worn by the well-heeled, trend-setting folk. Fellows’ genius as an illustrator lay in his ability to depict them in their everyday activities. Whether they were traveling the world, hosting dinner parties, hunting grouse, or just lounging around the penthouse or club, Fellows somehow made their rarified universe accessible. Ordinary folks could look at the illustrations and say, “I could wear that.”
Rather than looking overdressed and stuffy, or merely human shapes on which to hang clothes, Fellows’ subjects are men for whom dressing splendidly comes naturally. They’re having a good time, smiling, and enjoying themselves in their relaxed, party-filled sphere, and all of them are illustrations of casual, well-tailored elegance.
Laurence Fellows died in 1964, and in 2009 was named to the Society of Illustrators Hall of Fame. His immortality in the world of men’s fashion is assured simply because he had the ability to illustrate real men in their real lives and make those lives ones we all want to live." — BILL THOMPSON in Dandyisme.net























