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This is a photo from Shorpy.com.
This photo deserves a second and third look, though it is outside our usual time frame. Would this man's clothes (sans boater) be so out of place now?
It's a summer suit, very lightweight (he's in an open car) [EDIT: It's Palm Beach cloth!] - but look how well it drapes. Also note the pressed flat sleeve creases (seen into the 1960's), the soft collar, the subtle windowpane fabric, the modern-looking tie and knot. Also look at the tight sleeve head attachment, even though the shoulder is padded. The lapels are softened and rounded and pick stitched. There's not a pucker anywhere. The slanted breast pocket (no hanky) is also unusual. Contrast it all with his chum in the background, who looks much more as we would expect a fellow to be dressed in 1912, with a high stock collar, very thin knot peeking out of it and those wide lapels. The chap on the right looks dated to us, Mr. Bennett Clark on the left does not. That's classic styling.
The full Shorpy descrition:
1912. "Democratic National Convention, Baltimore. Bennett Clark, son of Champ Clark." Beauchamp Clark, favored to win the presidential nomination, ended up losing it to Woodrow Wilson. Son Joel Bennett Clark represented Missouri in the Senate from 1933 to 1945. Harris & Ewing glass negative.
I'd wear this, no problem.
This photo deserves a second and third look, though it is outside our usual time frame. Would this man's clothes (sans boater) be so out of place now?
It's a summer suit, very lightweight (he's in an open car) [EDIT: It's Palm Beach cloth!] - but look how well it drapes. Also note the pressed flat sleeve creases (seen into the 1960's), the soft collar, the subtle windowpane fabric, the modern-looking tie and knot. Also look at the tight sleeve head attachment, even though the shoulder is padded. The lapels are softened and rounded and pick stitched. There's not a pucker anywhere. The slanted breast pocket (no hanky) is also unusual. Contrast it all with his chum in the background, who looks much more as we would expect a fellow to be dressed in 1912, with a high stock collar, very thin knot peeking out of it and those wide lapels. The chap on the right looks dated to us, Mr. Bennett Clark on the left does not. That's classic styling.
The full Shorpy descrition:
1912. "Democratic National Convention, Baltimore. Bennett Clark, son of Champ Clark." Beauchamp Clark, favored to win the presidential nomination, ended up losing it to Woodrow Wilson. Son Joel Bennett Clark represented Missouri in the Senate from 1933 to 1945. Harris & Ewing glass negative.
I'd wear this, no problem.