scottyrocks
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 9,178
- Location
- Isle of Langerhan, NY
Only one Scotty? What with an avatar like your's?
It's the only one that survived that long. I have newer suits, but I wear them with contrasting waistcoats these days.
Only one Scotty? What with an avatar like your's?
That's what they said about two tone wingtips!^^^ Of course, today, some of the younger wearers, wear them with sneakers (seems the new thing to wear suits and sneakers) which, to my eye, undermines the elegance of the look.
I was just looking at photographs my family took during an extended trip to England in 1969, nowhere do I see the sort of counter culture style that was so obvious every minute in our home neighborhood of West Hollywood (which was counter culture central at the time) ... the most extravagant British styles (in clothes ads and design) were very slick and modish and occasionally Edwardian or even older. But usually elegant as opposed to the tattered, rural or distressed look you'd see in the US.
We sure shared Rock & Roll in the late 50s on.It's often all too easy to forget (perhaps the pervasive influence of the Hollywood entertainment machine) that the UK and the US were very different places during the twentieth century. Still are, of course, though the web and other entertainment factors haverapidly narrowed the gap in pop culture. The popular rock and roll fifties revivial subculture in the UK (which I very much enjoy) is very American - "the fifties" that it revives is a very, very different one than ever happened here in the post-war UK. Unrecognisably so to anyone I've known who lived through it. (Of course, that could also apply in the US). I should think it was approaching the turn of the nineties before you started to see very significant commonality between UK and US pop cultures on a day to day basis.
Of course, Hollywood had little relation to the realities of any era, Breen nonwithstanding. Sexual morality during World War II was extremely loose -- Elizabeth Hawes in her 1943 book "Why Women Cry" is quite frank and unapologetic about what was going on on the homefront. Suffice it to say that "Don't Sit Under The Apple Tree" was meant and understood to be an extremely ironic song.
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You could argue that the punk rock crowd that competed with the disco habitues was even more meticulous about "dressing up" for an evening out -- nothing is so detailed as the attire of a subculture.