« To blaze is a synonym of « to shine » ; « to dazzle ». A meaning that can be a clue as to the blazer’s origins : it is, at first, a lose-fit flannel(English flannel, from Welsh gwlanen, wool) - fabric whipped More sport jacket, wore by rowers during races and training to protect them from the wind and the cold. These jackets appeared in Cambridge and Oxfordgrained fabric with colored warp and white weft - durable, b More around 1820.
IVY League Uniform
Solid our stripped, their colors are unique to each club. The blazer is sported as a sign of belonging to a team, and gradually conquers other sports : tennis, cricket and golf among others. At the start of the XXIth century, it is also adopted by the Ivy League students who adorned it with their university blazon.
From the aristocratic cloakroom to the shoulders of the Mods
The stripped blazer is worn by 1910 and 1920’s dandys. In the 30s, it take the shape we know today, and becomes a bourgeois garment. Its identity becomes more martial : fitter cut, navy blue color, golden buttons. It might be for that reason that another legend lives on as for the blazer’s origins. It might have been wore by the « HMS Blazer » crew during the Queen Victoria’s coronation festivities, and then adopted as a Royal Navy uniform to her request. In reality, the British navy’s regulatory uniform only emerges 20 years later, in 1857.
Teddy Boys in the 50s and then the Mods in the 60s took hold of that wardrobe element that then became a rebellious symbol, intrinsically preserving its distinction and allegiance statement.

DUCAT, Andy. SANDHAM, Andrew. 1925.

MOORE, Roger, act. HAMILTON, Guy, dir. Moonraker. 1979.

CAINE, Michael. BAKSH, Shakira. Heathrow Airport, United-Kingdom. 1980.
- THE FLARED TROUSER
- BRUMMELL« the most sober, the most strict, the least extravagant man »
- THE GRAPHIC T-SHIRT« from a history that does not follow fashion but the needs for expression to being a part of collective conscious and an underground culture »
- FOUCAULT / TURTLENECK« though the black turtleneck was serving as a symbol of irreverence and rebellion in 1950s, Foucault’s rebellious spirit manifested in choosing a cream-coloured version »