All My Plaids Are Madras

When I began my career in the fashion industry three whole weeks ago, only if pressed would I admit my Ivy League credentials, fearing that in this case at least, a brand name diploma was trés démodé. Little did I realize that — once again — I was merely ahead of the trend.
Swap out your skinny jeans for some Nantucket red critter pants: "Ivy League" has officially unseated "preppy" from its wicker throne (and yes, in the fashion world these phrases refer to completely different styles). The cognoscente have discussed the growing movement all summer, variously ascribing it to recession-induced nostalgia or the power of Mad Men and Gossip Girl stylists. Evidence piles up: L.L. Bean plans one of those "new! classics! with! a! [hyperventilate] twist!" lines, designed by a dude who made his mark interpreting Mystic Seaport through screen-print. Some delusional designer dreamed up his own prep school just so it could have a uniform; his "Caulfield Prep" was deemed phony if well-cut. And then there's always this douchebaggery.

Rumblings crescendo'd to a climax this month when that most ivy-covered of Ivies announced it was extending its brand name beyond the academic world and into the sartorial.


Haaaaahvaaaaaaaahd shall launch a clothing line.
If possible, please contain your excitement.

“Harvard Yard” sprung from a 10-year licensing deal the university made with Wearwolf Group, a clothing manufacturer whose name makes this all sound like a euphemism for “selling our souls to the devil so we can fund our (potentially unsustainable) financial aid.” And much like admissions to Harvard itself, the first collections will be strictly menswear, with styles for women and select minorities to eventually follow.
My shirt is an honor student at Harvard.
These pictures fail to do the details justice: the crucial “Harvard Yard” label inside the collars, the crimson threading on the buttonholes. It is assumed that the wearer will already have fine leather accessories and a misguided sense of entitlement. And all of it could be yours for between $165 and $496 — mere pennies compared to actual enrollment at Harvard, and without all that silly work!

Yves Saint Laurent famously said, “Fashion fades; style is eternal.” Go Wikipedia “Harvard Style,” and you get a citation system and a sex act. I rest my case.

I realize there may be some Crimson sympathizers out there who would challenge another Ivy to do better. Fair enough. Let’s go down the list:
  • Brown: Although not really an Ivy, sells organic fair-trade hemp t-shirts left blank for free expression without fear of failure.
  • Columbia: Takes over local stores to the dismay of the West Harlem community, and gentrifies them into an American Apparel stocked only with black v-necks, leggings and ennui.
  • Cornell: Releases the next “Ivy line” in a desperate bid to emulate Harvard and seem “with it.” Barely musters Canal-Street quality but looks fine next to Miley Cyrrus’ shit at Wal-Mart.
  • Penn: Wharton vetoes on grounds that ROI wouldn’t be worth dilution of the university’s name.
  • Princeton: Briefly ponders swallowing pride long enough to release a limited-edition tie with J. Press, but only if the economy gets a lot worse.
  • Yale: While a clothing line would go along with “that whole Yale thing,” as Patrick Bateman so eloquently put it, insecurity over Eli clothes never beating Harvard’s stymies any initiative.
And then there’s Dartmouth.

We don’t like to brag, but the masses have been trying to buy into our mystique for decades:

In Germany, they call it animal Haus
Okay, you might say, so your college inspired the movie that would come to provide a template for cinematic comedy for the rest of the century, so what? Show me some real Dartmouth flair style.
Take Ivy.
Fair enough.

Harvard Yard's creative director told Women’s Wear Daily (sub. req'd; this is some serious shit) that his designers drew from "photos of students lounging in Harvard Yard in the sixties." I'm going to assume he’s referring to Take Ivy, a 1960s monograph from Japanese photographer Teruyoshi Hyashida. He spent 1965 traveling up and down the East Coast, snapping away on Ivy campuses in order to capture that certain
je ne sais quoi the Ivy League style has (and apparently the Japanese really, really want). Currently out of print, copies of the book can fetch as much as $1,500 on eBay.

HY may have drawn inspiration for Harvard’s line from the book, but Hanover’s campus is its dominant trendsetter:
Dartmouth Hall, the Dartmouthy-est of buildingsI myself chalk this up to the sheer force exerted by our combination of kickass, frattiness and rugged (veering into crunchy?) good looks. Oh, and that the womynz hadn’t yet infiltrated this great bastion of white manly privilege. After all, this was many years ago:

Damn straight that's Berry Library. HOLY CARD CATALOGS, BATMAN!

Forgetting the Stone Age technology, was it really all that different back then? Could there still a place for Ivy fashion — the 2/3 sacque suits and knit ties of bygone years? Can't we say "Goodbye, Jon Hamm," and openly, tightly and passionately embrace Don Draper? I mean, Dartmouth hasn't changed all that much if you really think about it.
Sweet dudes predominate both then and now. Clearly.
And Dartmouth was
totally progressive. Like, girls were allowed on campus even if they were the gender too weak to matriculate:
The best action Thayer ever hadAs long as they were Playboy Bunnies.
Not a BillyBobOn-campus food posed dangers then, as now; one can always find comfort in the grill line.
He lurks in labs, waiting, watching...There always has been, and always will be, This Guy.
I want one of those jacketsThe Green is still the primary spot to pick up some face time (now with fewer varsity jackets).
Sexy bone structure!And, obviously, ankle bones never actually go out of style.
There's no real reason
not to hoist up your khakis and wear that Ivy-educated heart on your sleeve.
Okay sure, the shorts were a
little tighter:
Was plaid the most flattering choice here?So maybe people smoked more.
And Zete hadn't been de-recognized for that whole date rape newsletter thing yet. 'Twas a simpler time:
Model-T's in Hanover? Still?Oh, and this. This might've changed:
Wah Hoo WahDetails. Mere details.

Solid rule of thumb: If you wouldn't stick it on the rear window of your car, don't wear it on your shirt.
Bumper sticker!
For further reading, definitely check out A Continuous Lean. It's among the many menswear*-focused blogs out there, and where I got the scans from Take Ivy (rather than, say, shelling out two grand for a book). This post was also brought to you by the letters A and my muse of choice this evening, Blue Moon. If I wanted to go for topical authenticity, I would have gone with Keystone, but instead I went for good taste. As usual.

*I've recently become fascinated by the world of menswear, a magical land where sizes actually correspond to measurements instead of self-esteem issues. It just blows my delicate feminine mind.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

"*I've recently become fascinated by the world of menswear, a magical land where sizes actually correspond to measurements instead of self-esteem issues."

Is this a Lucky-approved take on sizing?

Cool (not $2000) pictures though. I'm pretty sure that I have seen many the dude rocking mid-calf circulation boosting white athletic socks. <--modifier overload.

B. Martin said...

yeah, this is a hell of a post. good job.
A while back, MLR and I found that there are a ton of old, random photographs of Playboy bunnies visiting Dartmouth in the Google Life image archive: http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&safe=off&sa=1&q=dartmouth+playgirl++source%3Alife&aq=f&oq=&aqi=&start=0

Jklingon said...

Holy Shit! Scotty Hogan's been showing ankle bones in H-town for 40 years....

Tastemaker said...

Re: ankles. This masterpiece of 1966 journalism really needs a post/comment of its own:
"Others now give the trend Havelock Ellis overtones, agreeing, as one Californian puts it, that "hairs on the ankle look provocative." Some girls agree. "It looks sexy," says Rosalie Netter, in Manhattan's Greenwich Village. "You can see the bone structure, like finely chiseled stone," says Wisconsin Sophomore Karen Knauf."
So I hope Mr. Hogan's tali are like marble.

makens said...

Well done, Tastemaker. You're (taste)making it increasingly more difficult for me to phone in posts. And you're making the rest of us (i.e. me and Scos) look bad with your mastery of the continue reading option.

Rozenswag said...

The comment count doesnt do justice to the amount of off-line banter I've engaged in over this post - and it's only been half a day.

TMaker, almost a dozen people have asked me who you are and told me how much they like your posts. Keep it up.

Block said...

Had to skim because I'm the world's slowest reader, however, even with my limited literacy, I still thought this was a great post.

I know nothing of fashion, so I was all the more surprised to have enjoyed the post so much.

scos said...

Agreed, Block. This was indeed enjoyable. How do I know? Well, for starters, I read the whole thing, and didn't give up after I was confused by "trés démodé," "sartorial" and "ennui." Moreover, PhisyEel, who along with Danny E. has brought on board the Michigan grad crew (and hopefully others), wrote me: "Ivy League Post was really great. Who is Tastemaker?" So, Tastemaker, I hope that inflated your ego just a little bit more.

Actually, let's keep strokin' it, Clarence Carter-style. In your post you used "douchebaggery." Bbag, one of our biggest and most vocal fans, will absolutely love you for that one - I promise. In case you didn't know, he was one of the pioneer conjugators of "douche bag." Congratulations on getting one of our most famed alums on your side.

But at the same time, however, I must play devil's advocate. You went "Details. Mere details." on the Dartmouth Indian jacket pic. That, I'm pretty sure, pissed The Brah off. Why? Well, once we had the most badass, in-your-face offensive mascot ever. Now, we're a color that has size. I'm sorry, but that just sucks. Like our football team...

Finally, I regret to report that Mr. H's tali are extremely feeble. If his ankles were marble, they'd be the kind of marble that crumbles when it rains. While he was probably the best sailor to ever set foot on campus (he's also my roommate), he was forced to get major ankle surgery after a sailing (actually, it was pickup basketball) injury, and he hasn't been the same since. But he did showcase some real Dartmouth style, with his silly ankle-high white socks, flowered board shorts and hawaiian shirts. So, I'm sure he's enjoyed reading this. Mr. H, you out there?

Thanks again for an excellent post. And thanks to our readers, for making this a HUGE day at AMDAL; we've had over 900 visitors! Let's keep it going.

scos

Tastemaker said...

Everyone, I'm blushing a bright shade of Nantucket. Thank you.

And not to burst your bubble, scos, but at least 65% of today's visitor count was just me hitting 'refresh' to see if there were any new ego-stroking comments.

Anonymous said...

The Brah = slightly miffed that indian jackets are dismissed as details, but the term douchebaggery partially makes up for it... i think we should start a darmouth retro clothing line that brings back the indian - maybe a happy medium between the Dartmouth Review and 2108 Vintage... that would turn the douchebaggery of summering in cashmere into sheer awesomeness because you are summering in cashmere while offending hippies.

Correction for scos - Regional Manager Mr. H rolled his ankle at rock kandy party...