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Show us their suits

Two Types

I'll Lock Up
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5,456
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London, UK
Looking at George's suit, I wondered about the belt on his trousers. It appears to be very light coloured: I know it is difficult to tell from screen grabs but, is it a belt made from the same fabric as the suit?
 

herringbonekid

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East Sussex, England
TT, the belt looks like the same fabric to me.

the plus fours are cut VERY voluminously and i wonder if they were done extra wide to emphasise the fact that he's just spent a load of money on a flash suit (which is the point of this scene):

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ScreenShot2012-08-28at123543.png


ScreenShot2012-08-28at123607.png


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Two Types

I'll Lock Up
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5,456
Location
London, UK
They certainly look as if they have been deliberately fashioned to be extra wide to make George look ridiculous. I don't recall seeing period photographs with plus fours that are quite that wide.

I agree that plus fours are something that would be difficult to wear. But it all depends on circumstances. I have a pair of plus-2s that I had made specifically for walking/cycling. I have only once worn them in the city. There was deep snow (well, it was deep snow for London) so I wore the plus-2s with heavy brown boots, flat cap and a leather coat (a Swedish police car coat, I believe). That combination looked very central European and I didn't feel ridiculous - as i would have done were i to have been wearing a 1930s golfing outfit.
 

Fletch

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8,865
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Iowa - The Land That Stuff Forgot
TT, i agree that plus fours can look good for certain specific sporting outfits.

also, when they were in fashion you wouldn't stand out nearly half as much as you would today... ;)

plus4s-1.jpg
These guys were the dot.com startup of their day. Makes me wish I was their age, working 100hr weeks and living on baked beans and coffee, so I could wear those insane sweaters without looking like a Norwegian hot air balloon.

Not that you care, but 3 of these guys (Harman, Ising, Hamilton) ended up being the competition when they jumped ship for Warner Bros. That was 1930. By then the exuberance in dress had calmed down a little.
hugh%20and%20irsing.jpg

l-r: Hugh, Rudy, Honey and Bosko
 
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Qirrel

Practically Family
Messages
590
Location
The suburbs of Oslo, Norway
Looking at George's suit, I wondered about the belt on his trousers. It appears to be very light coloured: I know it is difficult to tell from screen grabs but, is it a belt made from the same fabric as the suit?

I think this is a belt which is permanently attached to the suit. I have a suit with this feature; the belt runs in a tunnel all the way around so that it has the appearance of a buckle fastening from the front.
 

Guttersnipe

One Too Many
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1,942
Location
San Francisco, CA
Here's "Ole Blue Eyes" showing us all how it's done . . . definitely a man who wore the clothes rather than the other way around. I love the dramatic Hollywood waist here:

sinatra.jpg
 

GoldenEraFan

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1,164
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Brooklyn, New York
actually i do care; i work in animation. ;)
Iwerks also became competition (for a while) setting up his own studio in 1930.

I need to get on this bandwagon, I work in animation too! What do you do herringbonekid?

Iwerks was working at MGM in the early '30s making Flip the Frog cartoons, but later rejoined the Disney. A great animator and inventor, he would go on to make many animation innovations over the years. The Disney studio itself before the late '60s was definitely filled with well dressed employee's. Even as casual of a setting a California animation studio was, those animators still put effort into their wardrobe. Besides looking at old photographs of the 9 old men animating my favorite features, it's fun to see how they dressed, which was casual, but classy. Ward Kimball especially.
 
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