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Corduroy Pants in the Golden Era?

Rudie

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2,069
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Berlin
In fact, there is a 1930s 3-PC French workwear suit in the SJC pipeline. Unconstructed, with belt back, bellows pockets and a very special waistcoat design. It will be available in corduroy and in vaugan, both washable.
 

Seb Lucas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,562
Location
Australia
It was very hard to get any cords here in the 1980's. I think the 1970's put people off. I saw many a red, brown and fawn cord suit with horrific wide lapels. I bought lots of nice second hand cord blazers at thrift shops for $4 to $6 in the mid 1980's. Sometimes wonderful thick English cord blazers from the 1950's. It's amazing the variety of quality and weight in corduroy fabric.
 
Messages
12,976
Location
Germany
I guess, my new black cord-trousers is okay. Surely not the first-class cord, because it's softer cord, not the recommended "solid". But feels good. But despite, I'm wearing classic long winter-underpants under it, like I do same on jeans, below +5°C. No experiments. :)
 

Dr H

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2,007
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Somerset, UK
Wow, this looks like a great company. Do you own some of their clothing?

Over the last few years, I have systematically replaced my formal, work, and casual wardrobes with Old Town and Tin House clothing (Canvey and Selsey caps, long tailed pullover shirts, ties, jackets: Lounge, Fitzrovia, Stanley, Borough, Marshalsea, short double breasted, overall, Medway, Fleet; jerkins, waistcoats (both sleeveless and sleeved), trousers: high rise, Vauxhalls, Dreadnoughts, Plains, stove pipes, Orfords). I can't praise the clothing highly enough - just love it.
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
25,082
Location
London, UK
The Old Town stuff is lovely, once you're certain of your size. I just wish they would do a four pocket waistcoat.... I've always found it odd that they stick so doggedly to the two-pocket, given the general era which inspires their clothing, but I've gathered from a few folks who wear little else that they really aren't prepared to even consider it.

I do foresee buying some of their trousersa at least in future, though - soon as I losed a bit of weight, as they don't cater to larger sizes so much.

The Aero trousers are also beautiful - nice, heavy corduroy, feels like upholstery grade. Again, once I shift the weight I'll be looking into those. (They occasionally do a 44, I think - but it's exactly that, there's no room for vanity sizing there!) I see now they're also doing a slightly cheaper, dirll cotton version, which is attractive.
 

Stanley Doble

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2,808
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Cobourg
An unspoken connection - corduroy started as a tough hard wearing material for working men. Many items of working class clothing were adopted by socialists and communists to show solidarity. That is how teachers and intellectuals got involved. In the twenties and thirties corduroy trousers, a turtleneck sweater and leather jacket was practically the uniform of the student radical.
 

tropicalbob

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,954
Location
miami, fl
It was very hard to get any cords here in the 1980's. I think the 1970's put people off. I saw many a red, brown and fawn cord suit with horrific wide lapels. I bought lots of nice second hand cord blazers at thrift shops for $4 to $6 in the mid 1980's. Sometimes wonderful thick English cord blazers from the 1950's. It's amazing the variety of quality and weight in corduroy fabric.
That's something I haven't thought of in a while. When I was growing up in the '50's and '60's we had beautiful, soft corduroys we wore all winter. Then, in the early '70's I noticed these incredibly cheap, thin, obviously inferior corduroys in all the shops: as I remember, Levi's were one of the main culprits.
 

Seb Lucas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,562
Location
Australia
An unspoken connection - corduroy started as a tough hard wearing material for working men. Many items of working class clothing were adopted by socialists and communists to show solidarity. That is how teachers and intellectuals got involved. In the twenties and thirties corduroy trousers, a turtleneck sweater and leather jacket was practically the uniform of the student radical.

It wasn't just progressives who word cords. Corduroy was worn by country gentry and game keepers and one reason it passed onto artists and intellectuals was they had less disposable income and wanted hard wearing gear that lasted. But you can never generalize like this. My grandfather wore cords all through the 1920's and 30's he was a prosperous businessman.
 
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Messages
12,976
Location
Germany
I think, the real "widecord" was the typical, bourgois, velvet-like feature of upper-class in the old old days, before big industry brought it to affordable massmarket.

Typical industrial "downgrade" of upper-class fashion, wasn't it?

And Klingon-proven, strong Denim killed it, finally. :D
 

Seb Lucas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,562
Location
Australia
That's something I haven't thought of in a while. When I was growing up in the '50's and '60's we had beautiful, soft corduroys we wore all winter. Then, in the early '70's I noticed these incredibly cheap, thin, obviously inferior corduroys in all the shops: as I remember, Levi's were one of the main culprits.

Yeah Levis cords were the pits. I remember picking up a fine wale cord blazer from the early 1960s which was English and as heavy as a leather jacket. Some of that cord material was bullet proof. You hardly ever see that material now.
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
25,082
Location
London, UK
Corduroy on this side of the Atlantic has a long history of being worn for country-casual by the well off, and workwear by the labouring classes. My mother bought us corduroys for much of the eighties when denim was still frowned upon, even in some casual contexts, in God-fearing Northern Ireland. (This an era when some middle-class parents would refuse their offsprings' requests for such 'thug wear' as DM boots, or denim jean jackets to be worn with jeans. For the rare non-uniform day, our school only relaxed the "no denim" rule around 1987.) I shed it by fourteen and never looked back until about seven years ago.

As for telling apart corduroy worn by country toffs and that favoured by urban labourers, it's largely an issue of colour. The latter will have worn grey, black, navy, dark colours that can hide stains. The former classically preferred outlandish shades - bright jewell colours, scarlet, emerald, and so on. I believe there's a place for both in my wardrobe.
 
Messages
12,976
Location
Germany
I'm watching "Stripes" (1981), at the moment. Bill Murray in classic flanneljacket and hazelnut Cord-trousers! :)

 
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wallypop

New in Town
Messages
44
I think the Aero waistband looks wrong, too many fabric layers. Somebody (probably one of the tailors on this board) mentioned it has to do with the construction. Somehow they followed modern standards and folded the seam allowance over the wrong way resulting in this funny looking thick waistband. The waistband would look much better IMO if it was flatter.
Does anyone wear corduroys in the summer? I use to wear OP cord shorts.
 

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