Senator Jack
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I don't have AMC, so I just watched the clips on the website.
Here's the classic 50s (1953) tie on Peck - probably 2.5" to 2.75" width.
Here's Jack Lemmon in The Apartment, shot in 1959/1960
(For some reason, these pics aren't coming up)
Certainly, there's going to be crossover in every era, so in 1960 older gentlemen would have their ties from a decade before, while the younger men, entering the workforce, would probably be wearing the narrow tie. My thought is that the ties aren't too wide, but they're too boring. Mostly stripes. No geometric shapes or chessmen that were popular in the era.
I have more of a problem with the speech, language, and mannerisms. Do any of those guys talk like any grown man you knew when you were a kid? They certainly don't sound like the New York executives I remember. In the late 80s, I worked at a New York agency, and all the executives were left over from the 60s. Most of them spat when they talked.
Regards,
Senator Jack
Here's the classic 50s (1953) tie on Peck - probably 2.5" to 2.75" width.
Here's Jack Lemmon in The Apartment, shot in 1959/1960
(For some reason, these pics aren't coming up)
Certainly, there's going to be crossover in every era, so in 1960 older gentlemen would have their ties from a decade before, while the younger men, entering the workforce, would probably be wearing the narrow tie. My thought is that the ties aren't too wide, but they're too boring. Mostly stripes. No geometric shapes or chessmen that were popular in the era.
I have more of a problem with the speech, language, and mannerisms. Do any of those guys talk like any grown man you knew when you were a kid? They certainly don't sound like the New York executives I remember. In the late 80s, I worked at a New York agency, and all the executives were left over from the 60s. Most of them spat when they talked.
Regards,
Senator Jack