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Since the question was brought up over in the "Fedora Lounge Guide to Palm Beach Cloth" thread, I thought that Palm Beach ties should have their own thread, separate from the "Show us Your Ties" thread. I'd especially like to see the labels, to try to piece together a chronology of the company, in relation to that of the fabric manufacturer.
Beau Brummell of Cincinnati, OH, introduced Palm Beach cloth neckties in 1936. The 4 fold patent was granted in 1938.
While the Goodall Sanford mills, producers of Palm Beach cloth stopped producing the fabric c.1956, Beau Brummel continued producing neckties under the Palm Beach name well into the 1960s. It is possible that they bought fabric from Burlington Mills/Burlington industries on a limited basis. It's more likely that they continued the licensing agreement they had with Goodall Sanford Palm Beach with the Cincinnati based Palm Beach clothing company, which bought the rights to the name after the fabric mills were bought out.
Dating conventions of the fabric (see other thread, linked above) should hold true for the neckties.
1936-1944 should say "Goodall"
1944- should say "Goodall Sanford"
1949 - should have an (R) symbol, as does the one below
Beau Brummell of Cincinnati, OH, introduced Palm Beach cloth neckties in 1936. The 4 fold patent was granted in 1938.
While the Goodall Sanford mills, producers of Palm Beach cloth stopped producing the fabric c.1956, Beau Brummel continued producing neckties under the Palm Beach name well into the 1960s. It is possible that they bought fabric from Burlington Mills/Burlington industries on a limited basis. It's more likely that they continued the licensing agreement they had with Goodall Sanford Palm Beach with the Cincinnati based Palm Beach clothing company, which bought the rights to the name after the fabric mills were bought out.
Dating conventions of the fabric (see other thread, linked above) should hold true for the neckties.
1936-1944 should say "Goodall"
1944- should say "Goodall Sanford"
1949 - should have an (R) symbol, as does the one below
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