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Yes, compared sadly to today...You know, that design would fit in just fine with a late-60s/early-'70s hippies peace theme...
No it wouldn't. It doesn't look like some hippie painted it in a drug induced stupor.
Yes, compared sadly to today...You know, that design would fit in just fine with a late-60s/early-'70s hippies peace theme...
No it wouldn't. It doesn't look like some hippie painted it in a drug induced stupor.
^^Hey, at least you did get a few good ones out of the lot, Gene. Any chance that you could show a photo(s) of the thin ones you wish to sell? I might be interested (or maybe JamesPowers...)?
Two dollar ties in NYC? You got lucky!!
As one who is prone to grouse at times about high prices on vintage ties that plague us here in the Big Apple, I felt it behooved me to share the two bargains I recently picked (at just $2 each).
The color of the second tie is in between the hues found in these two scans, but it's closer to the first than the second. Though a bit grungy when I bought it, it came out looking very clean and sharp indeed. Not sure what that coloration is at the larger end of the tie in the first scan, but it's not there when viewing it in person.
And I found interesting the band of green on the brown tie. I suspected it was meant to render a green knot with no other hint of emerald showing, but try as I might, I haven't been able to make that happen. There's always a slash of green showing beneath the knot (I'm tying it very short, but perhaps not short enough).
I dug around in my picture file and found a picture with one of my knot planned ties. The red and white stripe tie is a knot planned tie. The smaller red and white pinstripe area makes a nice contrasting knot. Notice how the knot area is straight across and not diagonal
So James, you're saying that the green is supposed to extend below the knot? It just sort of peeks out of the knot at an angle (kind of like it peeks out from the border in the first picture). An interesting enough effect, if that's what it's meant to do (the wife really likes it).
I am not quite sure what the original intent was with such a small area of the tie that color. I would say just tie it and let the color fall where it may.
Circa. 1954, this looks like some sort of bacteria under the microscope. Label is 'Metcalf Cravats'
[/IMG]
As one who is prone to grouse at times about high prices on vintage ties that plague us here in the Big Apple, I felt it behooved me to share the two bargains I recently picked (at just $2 each).
The color of the second tie is in between the hues found in these two scans, but it's closer to the first than the second. Though a bit grungy when I bought it, it came out looking very clean and sharp indeed. Not sure what that coloration is at the larger end of the tie in the first scan, but it's not there when viewing it in person.
And I found interesting the band of green on the brown tie. I suspected it was meant to render a green knot with no other hint of emerald showing, but try as I might, I haven't been able to make that happen. There's always a slash of green showing beneath the knot (I'm tying it very short, but perhaps not short enough).
As JP mentioned, it really isn't a knot planned tie, but it is interesting. Like the "Catalina Spices" line on the other tie!