A couple of days ago, when waiting at the underground/subway, an elderly man was standing in front of me.
He was wearing a grey sportcoat with amazing beltback (straight yoke, multiple pleats, halfbelt and center vent).
The back looked very good... thinking it was 30's for a moment I was...
Portrait of wealthy Turkish patriarch Reshat Gokkan (C), 80, posing w. his son Neyer (R), 50, a chemist & grandson Berin, 28, at home.
Location: Kadikoy, Turkey
Date taken: 1940
Photographer: Margaret Bourke-White
Nice. I estimate late-40's to mid-50's in a very classic cut. I would guess post-CC41, so probably 50's.
Long lapel roll and this type of micro-pattern was popular then. Also the font and design of the label.
If you intend to keep it Dostioffsky, I would definitely let out sleeves to the max.
This type of button stance for a DB became somewhat popular in Germany from the mid-30's onward, but was really widespread ca. 1947-52.
However it appears to originate from South America (or was popular there earlier on).
At least that's what in 1932 the German tailoring periodicals reported -...
Ah, it's actually from the Metropolitan Museum:
http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/159549?rpp=30&pg=1&rndkey=20140912&ft=*&deptids=8&what=Coats|Dinner+jackets&pos=9
As is this diamond-weave riding jacket:
I also doubt that changing the flaps can greatly "improve" a clearly 70's jacket if all the other features are not very 30's like.
Besides that, large squarish pocket flaps are also to be found on bona-fide 30's suits:
I think that a slight "matching of colors" would be better than repeating exactly the same stripes on three items.
Anyway as striped blazers, boaters and club-ties are all not part of my wardrobe (nor do I intend to add them), I shouldn't really be bothered by them... ;)
Great hair! And a sweater with a DB.
More cool photos of van Vliet.
Small photo from 1948, but note the very wide and baggy trousers (I don't know the English word... in German they are called "Überfallhosen". They are full length "knickerbockers"):
Source: classiclightweights.co.uk
Light...
Great stuff!
Sweater tucked into the trousers is something that needs to be done more often.
A great way to make newer "too long" knitwear work with a 30-40's wardrobe.
This is certainly a correct assertion... although numerous exceptions existed.
It's due to notch-lapels being the standard for a sport-jacket and being considered the "sporty" lapel, while peaks were "dressy".
That short sports jacket is lovely, by the way!
I have no doubt that this suit is 1930's. Everything looks perfectly right for a mid-30's US two-button SB.
The waistcoat has 4 pockets - one can see this on closer inspection. The photo is a bit unsharp and the fabric hides the pockets a bit.
The buttons are very "30's European-style" BTW -...
Thanks. European warm-weather casualwear from the 20's is certainly a bit of a "knowledge gap" for me.
Some ideas strike me as rather unappealing, though.
Tie and hat band in the same color stripes as the blazer?
Navy blazer with flannels (so far perfectly good) - but with odd...
The most versatile of all is light grey with a slightly brownish (more towards the reddish end, not green) hue... there probably are many ways to describe variations of this (taupe grey, clay grey, cinereous, copper grey etc.).
Fills the function of any grey or brown hat. I recommend it with a...
The vast majority of my genuine 30-40's street-suits have pocket flaps. I prefer a jacket to have them... unless it is black formal wear, of course.
A hallmark of many 70's jackets is the use of large square-edged "DB" flaps on SB jackets. That always looks a bit odd to me.
I agree though that...
Thanks.
It's actually a deadstock British CC41 double-breasted suit:
http://www.thefedoralounge.com/showthread.php?53383-Show-us-your-British-suits&p=1767543&viewfull=1#post1767543
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