reetpleat said:I can't say for sure, but I would guess that this is some kind of stamp meant to replicate the appearance of a woven button. many leather buttons are actually quarter inch or so strips that are woven in a cross weave pattern. Plastic buttons that attempt to replicate this look often have slight texture and fake lines such as this. This might be some kind of leather button that was stamped maybe.
reetpleat said:I can't say for sure, but I would guess that this is some kind of stamp meant to replicate the appearance of a woven button.
They go to within 1mm of the button edge. I will try and get a picture of the full coat in a few hours.Josephine said:I agree, especially if the lines radiating from the middle extend to the edge of the button, which it looks like they do.
Doran said:The best (in the sense of most genuinely appreciative) comments I get on my 1940s ensembles are from black people.
reetpleat said:I can't say for sure, but I would guess that this is some kind of stamp meant to replicate the appearance of a woven button. many leather buttons are actually quarter inch or so strips that are woven in a cross weave pattern. Plastic buttons that attempt to replicate this look often have slight texture and fake lines such as this. This might be some kind of leather button that was stamped maybe.
reetpleat said:I can't say for sure, but I would guess that this is some kind of stamp meant to replicate the appearance of a woven button. many leather buttons are actually quarter inch or so strips that are woven in a cross weave pattern. Plastic buttons that attempt to replicate this look often have slight texture and fake lines such as this. This might be some kind of leather button that was stamped maybe.
Mike in Seattle said:I decided to stay in Bellevue after an appointment because the freeway home was a nightmare. I headed for the mall and went into Nordstrom to wander around, kill a little time and decide where to have dinner.
I was cutting through the shoe deparment when a guy reminding me of Ralph Cramden came up to me with a lime green boat shoe in hand and asked if I'd get it for him in size 11. "Yo, buddy, think you can get this for me in an 11 D?"
I'd recently been watching Jeeves & Wooster and I suddenly channeled Jeeves. "No sir, I will not, and even if it were in my power, I would not. There's never an question in the realm of menswear where 'lime green boat shoe' is the proper answer for anyone over, shall we say, six. Might I suggest you rethink your footwear choices and perhaps consider a nice brown or tan, or even navy as more appropriate? And before you summon the manager to voice your extreme discontent with me, let me point out that I, too, am a customer here and not, as you surmised, an employee. Enjoy the rest of your shopping excursion."
I figure he probably stood there, slack-jawed for five minutes trying to figure out what I had said. One of the clerks standing nearby did smirk.
Mike in Seattle said:I'd recently been watching Jeeves & Wooster and I suddenly channeled Jeeves. "No sir, I will not, and even if it were in my power, I would not. There's never an question in the realm of menswear where 'lime green boat shoe' is the proper answer for anyone over, shall we say, six. Might I suggest you rethink your footwear choices and perhaps consider a nice brown or tan, or even navy as more appropriate? And before you summon the manager to voice your extreme discontent with me, let me point out that I, too, am a customer here and not, as you surmised, an employee. Enjoy the rest of your shopping excursion."
I figure he probably stood there, slack-jawed for five minutes trying to figure out what I had said. One of the clerks standing nearby did smirk.
Mike in Seattle said:I decided to stay in Bellevue after an appointment because the freeway home was a nightmare. I headed for the mall and went into Nordstrom to wander around, kill a little time and decide where to have dinner.
I was cutting through the shoe deparment when a guy reminding me of Ralph Cramden came up to me with a lime green boat shoe in hand and asked if I'd get it for him in size 11. "Yo, buddy, think you can get this for me in an 11 D?"
I'd recently been watching Jeeves & Wooster and I suddenly channeled Jeeves. "No sir, I will not, and even if it were in my power, I would not. There's never an question in the realm of menswear where 'lime green boat shoe' is the proper answer for anyone over, shall we say, six. Might I suggest you rethink your footwear choices and perhaps consider a nice brown or tan, or even navy as more appropriate? And before you summon the manager to voice your extreme discontent with me, let me point out that I, too, am a customer here and not, as you surmised, an employee. Enjoy the rest of your shopping excursion."
I figure he probably stood there, slack-jawed for five minutes trying to figure out what I had said. One of the clerks standing nearby did smirk.
That is awesome! :eusa_clapDoran said:I am not sure how much this has to do with dressing vintage, but I think y'all might enjoy it.
About a year ago I was pushing my daughter in a stroller down a pleasant street in Berkeley. She was about 1 year old.
A man in his early 60s was walking on the sidewalk toward me. He looked at me, looked at the baby, and smiled and said, "You see -- that's what you get for making whoopee!"
I was laughing for days.