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J.L. Taylor men's fashion catalog, 1927

RobStC

A-List Customer
Messages
371
Location
Edinburgh, Scotland
Disagree. I have rather good eye for proportions because of live drawing classes in the university. the 1920s fashion illustrations are not that bad and the heads notthat small. maybe in the 1940s with that boxy and bold drape stuff.

FFF: I assume that it is my post above that you are referring to here - I was actually commenting on how nicely these 1920's illustrations were done with respect to anatomy and proportions, and how it is the Apparel Arts/Esquire pictures (especially in the 40's) that are the more distorted..... So hopefully no disagreement required ;)

RobStC
 

Mario

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,664
Location
Little Istanbul, Berlin, Germany
What is with all the buttoned bottom buttons on the suits and vests?

Ladies and gentlemen! Playing for you tonight in The Brighton Beach Ballroom: Bernard Brooks And His Buttoned Bottom Bottons! :D

Sorry... ;)

Take a look at this 1951 photo of Cary Grant in his 3-roll-2 jacket:

grant-cut.jpg
 
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VintageEveryday

A-List Customer
Messages
390
Location
Woodside, NY
I've always loved the variety of suit lapels in this era. They're good references for someone like me who can only afford the 60s reproduction belt backs (in the sense that the purists turn their noses up at the 60s-does-30s/40s sport coats, saying the lapels make it unable to pass as a vintage style coat. To which I turn to illustrations such as these, with low lapel gorges and slightly skinnier lapels than the true 20s-40s suits they own with high, wide lapels)

(I'm open for comments on this thought)
 

Dirk Wainscotting

A-List Customer
Messages
354
Location
Irgendwo
The two-button arrangement of the 20s suits is not dissimilar to the two-button arrangement on some 50s suits and the suits from about 2010 onwards. The top or middle button being quite high.
So what you get now is people doling out advice about which buttons should be fastened - largely based upon classic 3-button jackets and where the button actually hits the waist rather than being halfway up the sternum - and the result is shirt and tie-blade ends on full display.
 

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