Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Summer Suits Advice/Opinion

Chasseur

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,494
Location
Hawaii
Chasseur, I feel like a pig but...

I just passed up a 44R Palm Beach suit at goodwill for $5. I promise I will go back and see if it's there. :eusa_doh:

(I wear a much bigger size and thought, "Who would want this?" Oh lord, sometimes I make myself face palm.)

If you can go back a take a look that'd be great!

However, is it made from Palm Beach cloth or is only the Palm Beach brand? Because in the 1960s-70s they made suits not out of the special Palm Beach cloth. I'd only be interested if its from the Palm Beach cloth (sorry to be pain about it).

Thanks in advance!
 

carldelo

One Too Many
Messages
1,568
Location
Astoria, NYC
In NY I find cotton and linen too hot. The linen suit I had was not the highest quality, however, so that may have been part of the problem. Tropical weight wool is better in my experience, but mostly I don't wear a jacket in the summer if I can help it.

I recently picked up a new sport jacket for summer wear - I thought it was a lightweight silk, but it turns out it's "100% viscose from bamboo". It seems like it will be good, but it's been cool in the city so I haven't tried it yet. I wish it was a full suit.
 

Chasseur

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,494
Location
Hawaii
I would also add for a jacket its helpful it is only partially or unlined. A linen or fresco wook jacket will not be that cool if its fully lined with a tightly woven synthetique...
 

Mario

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,664
Location
Little Istanbul, Berlin, Germany
I just posted this photo on the WAYWT thread but thought it would fit in here as well.

My late-30's Palm Beach suit. The fabric is not your typical PB cloth but tropical weight wool. Very lightweight and airy and in true vintage summer suit fashion it has a tendency to wrinkle a bit. Sadly there is no tag to indicate the fiber content.


palm_beach_tropical_01.jpg


palm_beach.jpg

 
Last edited:

Gin&Tonics

Practically Family
Messages
899
Location
The outer frontier
I'm a bit shocked to hear someone say that linen was too hot for them; my research has led me to believe that linen is the coolest wearing fabric on earth, and nothing can touch it in terms of being light, airy and cool on the body. Am I mistaken, or do I need to do more research?

The thing is, I absolutely cannot abide being hot and sweaty in summertime, but I can see the wisdom in hiding my ultra pale complexion from the sun's rays (not least because my father had severe skin cancer his whole life) and not assaulting passers by with my skinny white ankles and shins. Currently the only clothes I have that are tolerable for summer heat are shorts.
 

Mario

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,664
Location
Little Istanbul, Berlin, Germany
That tropical worsted wool suit I posted above wears amazingly cool. I can feel every breeze go right through it, so that's defnitely one way to go. Or take a closer look at fresco fabrics as mentioned by others.
 
Last edited:

Mario

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,664
Location
Little Istanbul, Berlin, Germany
Calling Palm Beach cloth 'ordinary' sounds somewhat funny to me... ;)

Well, there are a few labels, yes, but no label that is clearly indicating the type of fabric, the fiber content or whatever.

I've handled a garment made from PB cloth only once before (a tiny jacket for kids of the white variety) so it's hard for me to compare but as far as I can remember this fabric looks and feels different. Even if I compare it to photos of garments made from PB cloth (the only source available to me at the moment) it still looks different - and I went through all the available close-up photos of PB fabrics I could find after I received the suit. Add to that the fact that none of the labels mention that it's been made from ("The Genuine") Palm Beach cloth. This, of course, is only a hint, not a surefire proof. The only evidence could be that one label says 'DRY CLEAN or WASH according to Goodall Formula'. I find it very hard to make a judgement without proper first-hand experience. [huh]

I'd be more than happy if you could convince me that this is indeed made from PB cloth (well, I like the suit anyway, PB cloth or not, even though PB would be easier to clean than wool... ;)).


Palm-Beach--Laundry-Labels.jpg


Some other PB label and cloth:

palmbeachlabelhf7.jpg

 
Last edited:

herringbonekid

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,016
Location
East Sussex, England
yes... that is Palm Beach fabric. you can tell because it says so on the labels.;)

there is often confusion about what Palm Beach is made of and no wonder; there were several slightly differing 'blends'. for instance 1920s Palm Beach suit fabrics were 50/50 mohair / cotton.
however a 20s-30s Palm Beach tie label i have states the content is 50% rayon, 32% mohair, 13% cotton, 5% nylon !
 

herringbonekid

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,016
Location
East Sussex, England
yes, my bible... an original 1923 Sears catalogue. ;)

edit: no, it's not official Goodall literature, but why would the catalogue miss out rayon if it made up 50% of the content ?
 
Last edited:

Mario

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,664
Location
Little Istanbul, Berlin, Germany
Now that makes my day! ;)

As to the labels: I've seen photos of old (30's/40's) garments (and I believe right here on the Lounge) that had the same Palm Beach/Goodall labels but were allegedly not made from PB cloth. What made me especially insecure was that, to the best of my knowledge (which, of course, is not that much) garments made from PB cloth (and all the old Palm Beach ads I have) always sported a tag that explicitly mentioned something like 'made from the genuine cloth' or something to that effect. I wish I had more stuff (like suits for example) made from 'genuine' PB cloth. Only for comparsion, of course. ;)

And yes, I know about the confusion regarding the fiber content. Seems that a lot of people (including myself) thought that it included linen in the mix, which is obviously wrong.
 
Last edited:

Hershy

New in Town
Messages
22
Location
New York, New York
Chasseur, I feel like a pig but...

I just passed up a 44R Palm Beach suit at goodwill for $5. I promise I will go back and see if it's there. :eusa_doh:

(I wear a much bigger size and thought, "Who would want this?" Oh lord, sometimes I make myself face palm.)

Damn, that was a great find. I am very jealous BC i couldn't imagine finding that gold in my area. I hope you did buy it.
 

Hershy

New in Town
Messages
22
Location
New York, New York
I'm a bit shocked to hear someone say that linen was too hot for them; my research has led me to believe that linen is the coolest wearing fabric on earth, and nothing can touch it in terms of being light, airy and cool on the body. Am I mistaken, or do I need to do more research?

The thing is, I absolutely cannot abide being hot and sweaty in summertime, but I can see the wisdom in hiding my ultra pale complexion from the sun's rays (not least because my father had severe skin cancer his whole life) and not assaulting passers by with my skinny white ankles and shins. Currently the only clothes I have that are tolerable for summer heat are shorts.

Somebody mentioned Fresco wool, and linked something very good. TO me, Fresco seems all well and good. But, i dont have enough experience to judge. I would stick with seersucker or a very good quality linen.
 

Flat Foot Floey

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,220
Location
Germany
1931smnr20008.jpg
1931smnr20007.jpg


This article from 1931 mentions tropical wool, fresco, flannel and raw silk.

1931smnr22003.jpg

Here they do also mention cotton but no linen.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,259
Messages
3,077,506
Members
54,217
Latest member
crazyricks
Top