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Oxford Bags

Two Types

I'll Lock Up
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5,456
Location
London, UK
p.s. i was asked today by a man in a pub if i was wearing 'Oxford Bags' (i wasn't. i was only wearing typical 11" wide high-backed trousers with braces. i first cleared up whether he meant the term in the 1970s 'soul boy' flared version.... he didn't).

this is the second or third time i've been asked this question, so clearly there's still a percentage of the public who think that a wide 30-40s trouser is an 'Oxford Bag'.

Maybe the correct answer was:

"No, but I understand your mistake. These trousers developed from a style known circa 1927 as 'semi-Oxfords', which were effectively a return to a trousers similar to the dimensions of the original, early 1925, Oxford Bags, rather than the dimensions of the post-May 1925 Oxford Bags, when they reached silly dimensions."
 

Two Types

I'll Lock Up
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5,456
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London, UK
Mr French CanCan posted this picture on his blog. Not much information though. It appears to be a "secret society". Older than mid 1920s for sure.
http://fcancan.blogspot.fr/

booknsnakefounders.jpg



PS: It's the founders of the Book and Snakes society 1865.

Interesting. That predates the wide-trouser fashion of the 1880s, which I was aware of (but know very little about).
 

Flat Foot Floey

My Mail is Forwarded Here
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3,220
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Germany
I thought it was the "Skull and Bones" club Harvard.

Yes? I just saw the picture and in the URL it said book and snakes. Skull and bones makes sense too. Anyway it leads to conspiracy theory websites we better don't mention here. Clearly nutty as heck.
 

Retro Spectator

Practically Family
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824
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Connecticut
I didn't see those pants. Those have a disgustingly low waist. *yucky* I assume all of them are like that. Either that, or the guy needs to pull his pants up.
 
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Fastuni

Call Me a Cab
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2,277
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Germany
A rather odd pair of trousers with fishtail.

They have 12.6 inches (32 cm) wide legs and are straight cut.

I thought these were rough 30s German ¨Oxford bag¨-inspired slacks,
however according to HBK, the ¨Made in England¨-weave on the selvedge suggests a post-60s reproduction (perhaps theatrical?).

They are very sturdy and have a 34 inches waist and 32.6 inches inleg.

BagG1.jpg

Bag2.jpg

Bag5.jpg
 
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herringbonekid

I'll Lock Up
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6,016
Location
East Sussex, England
before anyone says "NO they're original !!!" consider that the finish is too rough for bespoke, but not production-line enough for workwear.

still would look great as part of a 1930s ruffian / Apaches look, with flat cap, braces, black boots and tattoos IMHO. ;)
 

Flat Foot Floey

My Mail is Forwarded Here
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3,220
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Germany
They look good. But would they have bothered to add 2 sets of braces buttons on a theatrical outfit?
Going with that theory: If there are action scenes in the play or fast costume changes between the scenes a button might get lost and the actor can just use the other. Usually theatrical garments are "just for show" because the audience sits rather far away but the garments also have to withstand a lot of stress, movement and sweat.
 

Fastuni

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2,277
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Germany
I was thinking along the same lines...
I´d wear them with an open-collar shirt and an odd peak-lapel jacket... too bad the slacks are a few cms too short for me.
 

DAJE

One of the Regulars
Messages
144
Location
Melbourne, Australia
I've seen doubled braces buttons like that on military uniform trousers/breeches from the 30s/40s.

I'd say these trousers were either made to fit double-button braces, or adapted to them.
 

Fastuni

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2,277
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Germany
If all buttons were intended to be used at the same time, they would need quadruple-braces.
As it is, half of the buttons are spares (or for adjusting fit).
 

Two Types

I'll Lock Up
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5,456
Location
London, UK
I've seen doubled braces buttons like that on military uniform trousers/breeches from the 30s/40s.

Yes, I've seen them on British battledress uniforms. But the extra buttons were, I believe, for buttoning the battledress blouse to the trousers.
 

Fastuni

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Germany
So you're having trouble imagining leather straps with two buttonholes instead of one?

Please show what you mean on the sketch I made. I think we are talking past each other.

Normal buttoning braces had two buttonholes on each of the three straps - makes 6 buttons in total on the trousers.

If you want to suggest (as I read your comment) that all 12 buttons on the trousers were used at the same time,
you´d need four buttonholes on each end of the braces, either on four leather tongues or on two wide tongues with two slits each.

I have never seen 12 button-braces and would appreciate a photo or illustration.

bracesNumber.jpg
 
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