Patrick Hall
Practically Family
- Messages
- 541
- Location
- Houston, TX
I recently completed my set of solid woven grenadine ties in black, burgundy, and navy blue, often touted today as "staple" menswear items, along with dress shirts in pale blue and white. By staple I mean items that are utterly basic, necessary, and utilitarian, the foundations on which a wardrobe is built, items that can be paired with nearly everything. There have been "staple" suits in the past - blue serge in the Golden Era, gray flannel in the 50's.
I'm hoping this thread can be a discussion of the changing "staples" of menswear, starting where all our catalog photos begin, in the tens and teens of the 20th century. What would the most basic, ubiquitous, foundational items of wardrobe have been in the early 20th century? How did these staples change through the Golden Era? (And to satisfy selfish curiosity, were solid grenadine ties "staple" items before Bond?)
I'm hoping this thread can be a discussion of the changing "staples" of menswear, starting where all our catalog photos begin, in the tens and teens of the 20th century. What would the most basic, ubiquitous, foundational items of wardrobe have been in the early 20th century? How did these staples change through the Golden Era? (And to satisfy selfish curiosity, were solid grenadine ties "staple" items before Bond?)