Dont worry, they would only have the mall style Avirex with the seam down the back hand warmer pockets and the paintings on the back.So, if all the chavs start wearing A2s - do we ditch them??:eeek:
Dont worry, they would only have the mall style Avirex with the seam down the back hand warmer pockets and the paintings on the back.So, if all the chavs start wearing A2s - do we ditch them??:eeek:
They certainly are. No self respecting football hooligan would be seen without one in the late 1990s. The Aberdeen Burberry store was chockablock with caps. They are certainly official merchandise. The whole point was that it cost £75 or something, and so was a sign of affluence. (I'm sure the line from the company now is that they never made one because of the chavvy associations, but for those of us whose memories are long enough …).
They certainly are. No self respecting football hooligan would be seen without one in the late 1990s. The Aberdeen Burberry store was chockablock with caps. They are certainly official merchandise. The whole point was that it cost £75 or something, and so was a sign of affluence. (I'm sure the line from the company now is that they never made one because of the chavvy associations, but for those of us whose memories are long enough …)
As far as dressing his age goes, if he was 15 and wearing a trench coat, then, yeah, fair comment, but I think by 20 it's a question of personal taste.
You lot are talking about the British working class as if they were an alien species infected with alien AIDS. Who cares about God forbid, being taken for a chav?
It's a shame that people are snobbish enough to use the word chav unreflectively yet are blind enough to their own cultural tics that they use a term that was touted in the media ratrher than the real British slang words which of course varied from town to town. The correct terms are legion although townies and neds are common enough, much much more so than chav.
If the trench is nice enough not to be plastered in Burberry logos or the horrible tartan it's probably nice enough to wear, if you like trenches.
here's a thought. Maybe the dude should just dress his age
You lot are talking about the British working class as if they were an alien species infected with alien AIDS. Who cares about God forbid, being taken for a chav?
Actually, I don't believe we are. I've heard a fair few folks complain about the use of the word "chav" as a term of abuse for the working classes, but I've never actually heard anyone who uses the word use it to refer to anything other than a specific subculture, the members of whom are often (but far from exclusively) working or under classes. "Chav" no more refers to the working classes as a whole than 'Texan' means 'anyone who comes from North America.
You lot are talking about the British working class as if they were an alien species infected with alien AIDS. Who cares about God forbid, being taken for a chav?
Chav is not a word aimed at the British working class in general, more a specific group.I suppose it's the engrained class consciousness of Britain that lingers on. It's the same with shell suits, wearing white socks with formal shoes, Croydon facelifts (look it up) and fake tan - perception and reception are bound up. With regard to chavs specifically, I'd say they were more an underclass than working class.
Nothing wrong with a Trench, plenty of them about, what you don't see many of, probably due to cost, is the Crombie, preferably in cashmere. Warm and classy.My 20 yr-old nephew is going to the UK via Turkey Italy etc in December, so naturally the subject of winter wear has come up, he has a Burberry trench I gave him, and as a military greatcoat would be too heavy to take on the Sri Lankan leg of his trip I advised that the Burb would probably do the trick.. however he is concerned that wearing Burb in the UK will immediately mark him as some low-rent parvenu, or chav, and is shopping for an Aquascutum...does the prejudice against Burb extend to all garments, or just those which feature the pattern on the OUTSIDE?