Vassar College Archives: 1950s

13/04/2011 § 3 Comments

Another trip through the Vassar College archives…
In case you missed our maiden voyage, check out the 1930s here.

If you’d like to take a wander through the archives yourself, visit Vassar’s Flickr account here.

Fotos: Brooklyn Flea

11/04/2011 § 7 Comments

**Updated**

A lot of people have shown interest in the details on the Brooklyn Flea, so I’ve got a quick update for inquiring minds.  The Flea is on Saturdays in Fort Greene and Sundays in Williamsburg, 10am to 5pm, rain or shine.

Fort Greene
176 Lafayette Ave. (btw. Clermont + Vanderbilt Ave.)

Williamsburg
27 North 6th St. (btw. Kent Ave. + East River)

Brooklyn Flea’s website, Twitter and Facebook.

Enjoy!

LIFE Archives: Jam Session

06/04/2011 § 1 Comment

All images below taken by Gjon Mili in 1943, via LIFE.

Lady Day.  Amaze.  Amaze!

Duke Ellington at piano.  Dizzy Gillespie to his right.

Ellington.

Conde Nast President Iva Patcevitch (2R),
Vogue Editor-in-Chief Edna Woolman Chase (R),
Unidentified others from Vogue.

Lady Day.

Vocalist Lee Wiley.

Vintage Dilemma: Schoolboy Tie

04/04/2011 § 4 Comments

You may recall my success at the Ralph Lauren Home Sale last month, but aside from the amazing phonograph I picked up, I also happened to find a precious tie that I just had to have.  Of shorter length, it was immediately obvious that this was a young boy’s tie.  From the frayed and somewhat uneven edges, and lack of any manufacturer’s label, it became apparent that I was looking at something handmade.

Even though it was a little worse for wear, I decided that I wanted to take it home.  I had a picture in my mind of a mother working diligently over her son’s tie, choosing the silk and painstakingly folding and stitching it into shape.  I like the colors and I usually wear my ties tucked in, anyway, so I figured that it wouldn’t matter that the ends were a bit tattered.  It was when I turned the tie over that I fell in love with it.

Written on the underside of the tie is the name of its former owner — James Bennett.  Having a name to add to the fantasy completely sealed the deal, and I happily carried my little tie home.  However, I now am faced with a dilemma.  I am torn between wanting to wear the tie and framing it.  I think it could be quite handsome under glass with a dark wooden and gold frame, no?  How silly James Bennett would think that was!

Vassar College Archives: 1930s

28/03/2011 § 2 Comments

Imagine how happy I was to find out that Vassar College, a small liberal arts college located in Poughkeepsie, New York, recently began sharing photographs from their extensive archive on Flickr!  As the college was founded in 1861 — originally as a women’s college and the first of the “Seven Sisters” colleges — the nearly 1,000 images offer an amazing glimpse at Vassar student life through the ages.  Admission: As I’ve got a few friends who attended Vassar, I’ve also been hoping to find some blackmail material, but haven’t been lucky.  Yet.

For our first foray into the archive, I’ve selected some of my favorite images from the 1930s set:

FDR was the commencement speaker in 1931.

Her shoes!

If you’d like to take a wander through the archives yourself, visit Vassar’s Flickr account here.

Prêt-à-Porter: Black + White + Prep All Over

24/03/2011 § 3 Comments

I’m most comfortable when my shirt has buttons on it.  If it’s made of oxford cloth, all the better.  Especially if it’s perfectly worn in — soft and frayed a bit around the edges.  My favorite shirts show their history.

Cardigan gives some sporty contrast,
and the stripes are more than a bit Waldo-like.

Black cable-knit tights and shiny patent penny loafers.  Preptastic.

Direct from Emirates Stadium.

Je porte: Rugby Ralph Lauren jacket, Fred Perry cardigan, Brooks Brothers Black Fleece OCBD, Club Monaco tights, H&M skirt, Sperry Top-Sider penny loafers

Le shopping: similar jacket, similar cardigan, similar OCBD, similar skirt, similar shoes

La photographe: Jennerator

One From The Boys: Silk in the Raw {also, My Tie Love Affair}

16/03/2011 § 4 Comments

My love affair with beautiful neckties is ages old, cherie, and I definitely think it began in my formative years.  The fact that my father wore a suit and tie every day served to transform the necktie into a powerful symbol of maleness and there is nothing I like more on a man.  Even when he’s in casual dress, the addition of a tie will make me look once, twice, thrice.  (Tie and glasses?  C’est Fini!)

In college, I worked as a sales clerk in men’s suits in a large department store one Christmas season.  The crowning glory?  Ties upon ties upon ties displayed in a rainbow wheel of silk on circular tables, susceptible to complete dishevelment at the lightest touch from passersby.  That table was a labor of love for me.  I lost myself in the pursuit of perfection while my co-workers steered clear, endeavoring to look busy as they futzed over already-tidied merchandise.

While I’ve definitely given more Hermès than I’ve received — I’m looking to rectify that, d’accord! — I’ve become something of a tie collector and I enjoy wearing one frequently.  (Sidenote: Isn’t it more than a bit unfair that a woman in a tie is viewed as more casual, whereas a man in a tie is automatically considered more formal?)  I tend to favor a skinnier tie and usually employ the military tie tuck to keep from looking too Annie Hall.  My best tie tip for the girls is that most of us can get away with wearing a boy’s tie — just look for the longest length available.  Brooks Brothers Fleece ties in a size 50 are perfect.  Added bonus: when they go on sale they run about $16.

Tie: Brooks Brothers Fleece, available here.  Foto: Jennerator

As spring approaches, I’ve been hungering for a few new ties and Lawrence over at Sartorially Inclined has clued me in to what just might be my next move: raw silk.  The ties I wear need to be versatile enough to be dressed down, but I love luxurious textiles — This is beautiful! What is that? Velvet? I definitely don’t want to be limited to knit or casual fabrics just because a tie on a girl is considered casual.  The texture of the raw silk immediately caught my eye — luxe, nubby, simultaneously shiny and matte — and I’m inclined to give the 7cm striped shantung ties by Drakes London a try with threadbare chambray, crisp dress shirts and everything in between.

What’s around your neck this spring?

H/T: Sartorially Inclined: Raw Silk For S/S

New Addition: Ray-Ban Caribbeans

14/03/2011 § 3 Comments

Newest addition to the family is a pair of Ray-Ban Caribbeans in light brown, with gradient lenses.  Yours truly almost settled on a pair of Wayfarers, before deciding something different was in order.  J’adore the slightly larger, squared shape and whisper of an upturned corner on these beauties.  Originally released in 1964, the Caribbeans have a lovely bit of glamour that I find lacking in the ubiquitous Wayfarers but retain the classicism I was looking for in a pair of Ray Bans.  Think of Caribbeans as the slightly more posh cousin of the traditional Wayfarers.

Next on my list is a pair of Catty Clubmasters, if only I can decide on the color. (Of course, I’m leaning towards red.)

LIFE Archives: The American Man {also, Nina Leen}

08/03/2011 § 9 Comments

For the August 26, 1946 issue of LIFE Magazine, photographer Nina Leen was tapped again to capture distinctly American characters.  After photographing the American girl for “The American Look” article in 1945, she then turned her lens on “The American Man.”  Leen’s European roots — she was born in Russia, and lived in Germany, Switzerland and Italy — and her seven years living in the US were touted as perfect credentials, as she had become “thoroughly familiar with American men without becoming used to them.”  Leen’s article is an amusing view on the character and habits of the “exotic” American man, coupled with beautiful images of postwar menswear.

“HE IS HUSKY, takes enormous quantities of physical exercise.
HE IS HANDSOME, but not so handsome as he thinks he is.
HE IS COLLEGIATE, manages to resmemble a Yale man for years.”

“HE LOVES SMALL ANIMALS, will often stop on the sidewalk to scratch the ears of a stray cat.
HE EATS ICE CREAM in enormous quantities, savoring it as a Frenchman would a vintage wine.
HE MARRIES EARLY, usually looks entirely too younge to be the father of his growing family.”
“HE DRINKS MILK when dining out.  In Europe only invalids or men with ulcers would do this.
HE IS TALL and likes to look taller.  He considers being six feet tall a personal achievement.
HIS SECRETARY is apt to be very pretty, something which European wives would not tolerate.
LEFT TO HIMSELF at the delicatessen, he runs amok, always buys too much beer, cold meat.”

“A BLUR is all one seems of him in the morning as he bursts from his house to make the train.
BUT HE DAWDLES, once in the city, stopped by excavations, shop windows, tennis matches.
HIS BUSINESS SUIT is his uniform.  With it he wears a four-in-hand tie, may carry a briefcase.”

“One thing that Miss Leen immediately noticed about the American is his legs…Their favorite position, particularly during business conferences, is on tables or desks, the higher the better.”

This last group of images of the “slouching American man” is my favorite.  Leen shot these at the New York office of Young & Rubicam, an ad agency founded in 1923 that still operates to this day at its original Madison Avenue address.  What we are treated to are photos of real Mad Men.

Did you notice he’s drinking milk?

I was able to dig up plenty of images Leen took for this article in the LIFE archives.  They are such a wonderful look at the 1946 American male, through the amused eyes of Leen.

How sweet is Hughie?!

Hey, mister suspenders — I really heart your anchor tattoo.

All images via LIFE.

Further reading: “LIFE: The American Man

LIFE Archives: The American Look {also, Nina Leen, Veronica Lake, Bass Weejuns}

06/03/2011 § 3 Comments

In the May 21, 1945 issue of LIFE Magazine, an article called “The American Look” appeared alongside wonderful images by photographer Nina Leen.  Asserting that during WWII, US GIs had travelled the world and found the world’s women lacking in comparison to the “girls back home,” the article is a charming celebration of the fresh-scrubbed American girl, a wonderful look back at fashion and beauty in the 1940s and, of course, is a bit unintentionally funny to the modern eye.  For someone like me, a prep with a penchant for nostalgia, this article is a beautiful, inspiration-filled time capsule of womenswear.

“In this most immense of wars Americans have involuntarily absorbed such a knowledge of people and races as would never come their way in peacetime years.  Naturally the GIs’ interest in racial strains involves girls.  They have seen and evaluated the relative endowments of English girls, French girls, Australian girls, Polynesian girls.  They have found some to be beautiful, some pretty, some exotic.  But none of them look like American girls and the GI has come to appreciate and miss, with a deep and genuine poignance, the look that sets American girls apart from those of all other lands.”
“A friendly, luminous smile…is a cardinal element of The American Look because American girls have the finest teeth in the world, an asset that derives from the balanced diet and good dental care that are the heritage of most American children.”

GOOD GROOMING: Good grooming shows in the American girl’s big, competent, well-cared-for hands.  She has at least one manicure a week, constantly freshens nail polish and uses much hand lotion.”
NATURALNESS: Her “natural” look is a carefully contrived one.  It means an evenly powdered, slightly rouged face, a mouth firmly and deeply outlined in bright lipstick.  She uses mascara and eye shadow sparingly and makes no attempt to hide her freckles under a heavy make-up base.  Her eyebrows are neat and brushed.  They are carefully shaped but never look plucked.”

CONFIDENCE: She walks erect, holds her head high, and she is not nonplussed by the admiring glances or whistles that follow her.  Whether short or tall she does not mince as she walks but steps forward with graceful athletic stride she acquired as a roller-skating, ball-chasing tomboy.”
AGELESSNESS: She keeps young in spirit and appearance well past the age when other women would consider themselves middle-aged and does it by minding her diet, her figure and her clothes.  No matter what her age, her favorite costume for street wear is a good, not too mannish suit and blouse.”

“THEIR LEGS ARE LONG: The American girl is growing taller and most of the additional length seems to go to her legs…Their feet are getting longer (size 7 shoe vs. 6 1/2 ten years ago), but as compensation that has the effect of making their ankles appear proportionally slimmer.”

Her penny loafers! J’adore! Even if she has big feet.

The article stands the test of time  and is ah-mazing — even if some of the ideas are more than a bit outdated at this point — mainly due to the beautiful photographs taken by Nina Leen.  Leen was one of the first female photographers for LIFE and is best known for her images of fashion, Americana and animals.  Luckily my dear, I was able to find a few additional images Leen took that did not make it into the article.

Une femme magnifique! I want this woman’s hair, her shoes, her car…
I’d even take whatever she’s got in those packages she carrying.

Aside from the adorable boy, I am swooning over her striped dress.
Do you not see the princess sleeve with the rickrack edge?  Parfait!

The epitome of classic prep style: tweed, twinsets, pleats, golf.

Even though this picture was taken in 1945, does she not still come off très élégante?  Is she not the picture of a “modern woman”?  Did you notice her darling driving gloves?

J’adore the high waist and the 3/4 sleeve of the suit, the stingy brim of the hat.
Her hair has me thinking of the iconic Veronica Lake.
(Before she changed her hair for safety, of course!)

All images via LIFE.

A better look at the adorable shoes.
Do we think they are Bass Weejuns?

Image via GH Bass.

While at a uniform-required Catholic elementary school, I requested penny loafers specifically — even though all the other girls were wearing light-up LA Gear monstrosities.  My prep runs deep, cherie.  I think spring is a perfect occasion for a new pair.  If you are similarly inclined, do stick with the original: Bass Weejuns.  Virtually unchanged since Maine shoemaker G.H. Bass began making them in 1934, the shoe is iconic, well-made and will not break your precious piggy bank.

Further reading: “LIFE: The American Look

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