In late 19th cent, Victorian feminists started wearing a long one-piece form of underwear known as the union suit. This was part of a dress reform movement, where women wanted to be more comfy. Men later adopted this type of women's underwear & turned the top half into t-shirts
When Keir Hardie, founder of the Labour Party, was elected as MP, he showed up to his first day of work in a suit. Proper MP uniform at the time was a frock coat and silk top hat, but Hardie wore a suit to signal his allegiance to the working classes. The press was scandalized.
In the US, a similar shift was happening. Those who owned the means of production (capitalists) and those who managed those means (managers) adopted three-roll-two suits, button-down collars, and rep striped ties. This uniform hid class differences.
In his 1919 muckraking exposé The Brass Check, Upton Sinclair wrote about people who worked in offices and those who labored in the mailrooms below. This is where we got the terms "white collar" and "blue collar," which allowed ppl to sidestep uncomfortable discussions of class.
Sinclair knew that middle managers often thought of themselves as part of the capitalist class because they wore similar clothes and ate similar foods, even though their material interests were more aligned with blue collar laborers. From his essay:
During the 1920s through 40s, ethnic minorities—most of them Blacks and Latinos, although also some Asian Americans—wore an oversized style known as the zoot suit. For them, the style represented ebullience and swagger; for white middle class America, it was unseemly and sinister
Many felt it was unpatriotic to wear so much cloth in the face of war time rationing. So in the brewing stew of racial tensions in 1943 Los Angeles, some sailors went around beating up young Latinos for wearing these big clothes. This was known as the Zoot Suit Riots.
A similar thing happened in Nazi-occupied France. Supporters of the Vichy government hated the oversized clothes on young Parisians known as les zazous. They associated the clothes with degenerate taste in music and language (jazz and slang), as well as sympathy for Jews.
During the Civil Rights movement, many organizers knew they had to put on the appearance of white middle class respectability in order to be taken seriously. But when they went into rural locales, those same suits alienated people, so the wore denim and workwear.
It was also around this time that many younger people started to become disillusioned by the suit, as it became too closely tied with the establishment and a kind of suburban, bourgeoise lifestyle. The film The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit is about this struggle with conformity.
With the Civil Rights movement, feminist movement, anti-war protests, and counter-cultural movements in the background, many young people sought other aesthetics. Thus we get the blooming of countercultural aesthetics, such as Jimi Hendrix's (bespoke) floral creations.
After the Stonewall Riots, many in the LGBTQ+ community were sick of living in the shadows. For many gay men, reaching into their closet was a way for them to come out of it. Taking inspiration from transgender sex workers, some adopted what became known as “radical drag.”
This style blurred the line between masculine and feminine by combining the more extreme symbols of both. Gold lamé dresses were worn with work boots, pink tutus were paired with army jackets, and bearded faces were caked with make-up. The look proclaimed a person's identity.
These ideas would be later carried forward by protopunk bands such as The New York Dolls, who performed in feminine dresses, long hair, and glitter-glam make-up. Their laer music influenced The Sex Pistols, Kiss, the Ramones, Guns N’ Roses, and the Smiths.
Many gay men during this period also didn't like the idea that being gay meant you were feminine, so they took on the traditional visual markers of hyper masculinity. Often, this meant adopting a working-class aesthetic, but tightened up to sexualize it.
Writer Frances Fitzgerald dubbed this the "The Clone Look" or "The Castroids" for people around San Francisco's Castro Street. It was "cowboy or bush pilot: tight blue jeans, plaid shirts, leather vests or bomber jackets, and boots. The new look was ‘gender-eccentricity.'"
If this style looks familiar it's because it has now become mainstream, even wore by the loudest of anti-LGBTQ+ voices. Tight work clothes signal this is not about function but identity. But since so many people wear it nowadays, the in-group LGBTQ+ signal is now lost.
To me, it's undeniable that clothes are political because we're currently living through one of the most politicized clothing. Many states have tried to pass bans on drag shows, even when no children are present. That's essentially about how people are allowed to dress.
We can't imagine the sexual and gender revolutions of the last 100+ years while confining men to suits and women in sundresses. Clothing is inherently political because it's a way for people to identify with groups and express their individuality within them.
The expansion of dress practices goes hand-in-hand with who we think counts in our nation. First, we collapsed the visual distinction between white, straight men of certain social classes: aristocrats, capitalists, and managers. Gone was the frock coat; this was the age of suits.
As the 20th century marched forward, dress influence flowed not just from those with financial capital, but also those with cultural capital: workers, artists, musicians, etc. This again went hand-in-hand with the pro-labor and Civil Rights movement.
The political movements around gender and sexuality have also spawned new aesthetics, such as drag and punk. When Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren opened their radical shop on London's King's Road, they named it SEX (all caps so you couldn't mistake it).
I've often said that dress is a type of social language, and since everything is political, dress reflects not only key dimensions of our identity (e.g., gender, sexuality, class, etc), but also the political zeitgeist and structures. As politics change, so do our dress habits.
In fact, understanding the cultural and political dimensions of clothing is the easiest way to dress better. This frees you from thinking about dress as a series of meaningless trends shaped by editors and designers. It becomes about social history and stories.
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The first and most obvious is a field jacket. Every armed force around the world has their own designs. Since I'm based in the US, I will only talk about the ones issued by the Quartermaster General of the US Army.
There have actually been several iterations, each denoted by an M and two numbers for the year issued. The M43, which was in service from 1943 through the 50s, has lapels (pic 1). The M51, issued during the 1950s through 60s, has a shirt style collar (pic 2).
When I was on a menswear forum, I once debated the same four guys for like eight months straight, arguing every day online, about how oxfords should be worn. In the end, one conceded that the only people he sees doing what I recommend are old guys at his church.
I hold that there was something special about the way tailored clothing was worn prior to the 1980s. First, the quality of the tailoring was higher; second, things were put together more tastefully (to my eye). This was true across racial and social classes
This is a good opportunity to mention two people who I think are among the best-dressed men in the United States. At least in terms of wearing tailored clothing. 🧵
I agree with Kenasha that dress is cultural; what we deem as "good" is often about cultural language. If you don't find my examples compelling, there's of course no reason to consider my suggestions. But I disagree my advice leads to drab outfits.
I can think of two examples, both men who happen to be brothers. The first is Dr. André L. Churchwell, Professor of Medicine at Vanderbilt University; the second is Dr. Keith Churchwell, President of the American Heart Association.
Here's my suggestion for a "Steve Harvey wardrobe." That is, a minimal number of purchases but with the highest impact and most versatility. Like Harvey, I'm only talking about tailored clothing. 🧵
First, most men could use a dark worsted suit because this is still the expected uniform for weddings, funerals, court appearances, and some religious services. Get a single breasted, notch lapel suit in dark grey or navy. And the things you need to wear with it (shirt, tie, etc)
Next, get a notch lapel, single breasted navy sport coat. Remember: a sport coat is not the same as a suit jacket, which means you can't just wear the suit jacket in the previous tweet without the matching pants. Get the sport coat in a fabric that makes sense for your climate.
I've addressed this many times and have been reluctant to use people's videos, as they're often made by regular people who are just trying to have fun. But this is a famous content creator with 1M followers, so I feel better about showing why this doesn't work. 🧵
There are two keys to understanding why this doesn't work. The first is knowing the difference between a suit and a sport coat. A suit is a garment where the jacket and pants are cut from the same cloth, and they're meant to be worn together.
A sport coat is when the jacket is meant to be worn with trousers cut from a different cloth.
Most fabrics are plain weaves or twills. A plain weave is when the yarns criss cross each other like a tic tac toe pattern. A twill forms diagonal ribs, like what you see on your jeans. 🧵
If you find that you wear through fabrics quickly, try to wear heavier fabrics, and switch from plain weaves to twills. Generally speaking, twills are more durable. There are many types of twills. In men's tailoring, I particularly like cavalry twill and whipcord.
Cavalry twill is a double twill, such that it has a twill within a twill. See line running down middle of the rib (pic 1)
Whipcord is a regular twill, sometimes mottled in color. It has heavier rib than most twills (pic 2)