Metatron
One Too Many
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Military clothing has always influenced civillian fashion.
But historically, military clothes worn in a civillian context, virtually unchanged from their original form, is something I associate on the one hand with people who wore them out of necessity, for example in the chaos that was post war Europe. (As per this article on post war French fashion which views the military surplus thing with disdain:http://tintrunk.blogspot.co.uk/2011/01/frenchmens-fashions-1947.html)
Sartre:
And of course post 1960s when everything really loosened up with the plethora of subcultures etc etc...
So I was a bit surprised to find a lot of evidence of surplus military clothing worn with 'cred' much earlier, from the 1940s and 1950s:
Marlon Brando on the set of On the Waterfront:
James Dean:
Paul Newman:
Surplus sold through Sears:
And this one really stands out: Camouflage as fashion.
I never would have imagined that this was a thing in 1948. The idea that something could be lifted completely from it's original design and turned into a purely aesthetic feature. It isn't quite the same as adopting the design of a trench coat because of it's practical features. This is veering more into the subversive and fun side of things.
More parkas and things in the Canadian archives:
http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/cmc/009002-101.02-e.php?PHPSESSID=fmun3ree5d48iaqq0rjvid6ov7#e
The more things change the more they stay the same and all that...
But historically, military clothes worn in a civillian context, virtually unchanged from their original form, is something I associate on the one hand with people who wore them out of necessity, for example in the chaos that was post war Europe. (As per this article on post war French fashion which views the military surplus thing with disdain:http://tintrunk.blogspot.co.uk/2011/01/frenchmens-fashions-1947.html)
Sartre:
And of course post 1960s when everything really loosened up with the plethora of subcultures etc etc...
So I was a bit surprised to find a lot of evidence of surplus military clothing worn with 'cred' much earlier, from the 1940s and 1950s:
Marlon Brando on the set of On the Waterfront:
James Dean:
Paul Newman:
Surplus sold through Sears:
And this one really stands out: Camouflage as fashion.
I never would have imagined that this was a thing in 1948. The idea that something could be lifted completely from it's original design and turned into a purely aesthetic feature. It isn't quite the same as adopting the design of a trench coat because of it's practical features. This is veering more into the subversive and fun side of things.
More parkas and things in the Canadian archives:
http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/cmc/009002-101.02-e.php?PHPSESSID=fmun3ree5d48iaqq0rjvid6ov7#e
The more things change the more they stay the same and all that...
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