Two Types
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 5,456
- Location
- London, UK
I have a pair of dark cream flannels in a heavy wool (16oz maybe). They are great for spring and autumn but they stay in the cupboard in summer.
In Raymond Chandler's Farewell, My Lovely, published in 1940, there is an excellent description of the character Lindsay Marriott, a blackmailing gigolo, wearing an elegant cream flannel suit. It's clear from the first person narrative that Marlowe thinks such a suit is fussy and that Marriott is an effete dandy.
Of course, Marlowe was also inherently suspicious of anyone who wasn't clad in work-a-day blue serge - General Sternwood aside, who he seemed to like a little.
To me it seems like Marlowe objects mostly to clothing that doesn't meet his standard of manliness. For instance, he thinks that Lynn Marriott's flannel suit is fussy or that only a punk would wear flashy pachuco outfits like the houseboy, Candy, in Playback.
Back to vintage fabrics - I'd never seen or heard of "tennis suits" before, but it makes sense. Doesn't Fitzgerald have Gatsby dressed in a white flannel suit too? Might white wool suits for autumn/winter may have been a dandyish, parallel phenomenon to the sportswear you mention Guttersnipe?
Back to vintage fabrics - I'd never seen or heard of "tennis suits" before, but it makes sense.
some vintage fabric i bought a while ago with a weave i don't know the name of.... does anyone know ?
it's about 14 oz, so not as heavy as my ideal 18, and rather 'crisp' without being scratchy.
the jazziness of the weave makes me wonder if it's 1920s.