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I'll Lock Up
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Please post some photographs and I am sure we will be able to give you feedback.
I must comment though, that 20-24 inches does not seem all that extreme.In early 1925, 24 inches was extreme! 24 inches of flapping ankle fabric made front page news and took the world by storm. When the first 'bags' arrived in Australia there were journalists waiting to interview the owners.
And it wasn't just the size that was extreme: the colours played a major role in the notoriety of Oxford Bags.
All I can say is that you should prodduce them in a heavy weight, maybe a flannel. In teh late 90s, I saw a lot of cheap repro bags done for dancers in light weight fabrics. In my opinion, they looked awful, costumey and ridiculous. Just my opinion, of course. But without the weight, they just flop around.
Never underestimate the ability or propensity of a working class youth to scrape together some money and buy some flashy clothes, or some very expensive clothing. Think zoot suiters, for example. You still see it today. Poor kid in the inner city sporting a $250 pair of Nikes or Fubu Jeans. I think These days in America, most white youth are not into clothes in this way, but A lot of minority styles are into looking nice or particularly stylish. In the UK, the mods or teddy boys were prime examples of this. When you think about it, poor kids, with only minimal rent, and no car or family might have a lot more disposable income than many middle class kids. I must comment though, that 20-24 inches does not seem all that extreme. Let's not go calling every flare or bell bottom pair of trousers Oxford Bags just yet.
Michael Caine writes about this in his autobiography. From a working class home in London, he bought his first bespoke suit when he was in his teens, of "genuine prewar" material.
He didn't buy it from a West End tailor but the suit was identical. He had it made by one of the East End tailors that the expensive shops farmed their work out to.
The suit got him his first office job. That and a little lying about his education and background but the suit sold the story.
Oxford Bags: The Most Important Trousers of the 20th Century
Those of you who have followed this thread might find this of interest. Inspired by our discussions here, I have donned my research hat and prepared a lecture on the history of Oxford Bags. It covers a wide time period and discusses, and expands upon, a number of points that you have read here. The story takes us from travelling salesmen in the UK in the 1880s to the streets of Istanbul and Bucharest.
New Sheridan Club Monthly meeting
Wednesday 5th June
7pm–11pm (lecture at 8pm)
Upstairs, The Wheatsheaf, 25 Rathbone Place, London W1T 1JB
Members: Free
Non-Members: £2 (first visit free)
Mr Sean Longden will talk to us earnestly on the subject of Oxford Bags: The Most Important Trousers of the 20th Century.
http://www.newsheridanclub.co.uk/events.htm
The 'New Sheridan Club' started life as an offshoot of 'The Chap' magazine. A number of FL members attend the club's events.
I hope to see some of the UK FL members there.