Speedbird, that is the perfect summing-up of American Classics. Long may they live (esp. because I've got to get my Red Wings resoled)...
So it was J. Simon that folded? What a shame. For those who didn't know it, J. Simon was a small shop run by a (reputedly) original 60s mod, which was the first place in London to sell what I can only describe as the American preppy look: Bass Weejuns (when the Weejun was as exotic in London as a Sumatran Tiger), Pendleton shirts, Woolrich - they might even have had Filson. And all sorts of accessories. If you wanted chinos, you went to J. Simon. If American Classics were peddling the American Dream (in neon), then JS were providing an idealized and highly selective glimpse of what that exotic creature, the American male, was supposedly wearing (it sort of presupposed you hadn't actually been to America). I suppose all that stuff became totally mainstream with globalization, and in a way I'm surprised they lasted that long, but still...
So it was J. Simon that folded? What a shame. For those who didn't know it, J. Simon was a small shop run by a (reputedly) original 60s mod, which was the first place in London to sell what I can only describe as the American preppy look: Bass Weejuns (when the Weejun was as exotic in London as a Sumatran Tiger), Pendleton shirts, Woolrich - they might even have had Filson. And all sorts of accessories. If you wanted chinos, you went to J. Simon. If American Classics were peddling the American Dream (in neon), then JS were providing an idealized and highly selective glimpse of what that exotic creature, the American male, was supposedly wearing (it sort of presupposed you hadn't actually been to America). I suppose all that stuff became totally mainstream with globalization, and in a way I'm surprised they lasted that long, but still...