HUSBANDS JOURNAL

JOURNAL

ENDGAME, SAMUEL BECKETT

NAGG. – (…) An Englishman – (he takes an english face, then takes back his own) – needing a pair of striped trousers in a hurry for the New Year festivities, goes to his tailor who takes his measurements. (Tailor’s voice.) “That’s the lot, come back in four days, I’ll have it ready.” Good. Four […]

BLAZERS

« 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 sport jacket, wore by rowers during races and training to protect them from the wind and the cold. These […]

ANTOINE DOINEL : LÉAUD BY TRUFFAUT

« In september 1958, I posted an ad in France-Soir to find a thirteen year old boy who would be The 400 Blows’ hero. (…) about sixty children came, and I tried each one of them on sixteen millimeters (…) Jean-Pierre Léaud was clearly standing out from the rest and, after several play-offs, I decided […]

FERDINANDO CARACENI, YVES SAINT LAURENT’S TAILOR

There’s an Italian tailors dynasty founded in Ortana a Mare at the beginning of the XIXth century – unless it goes back to more ancient times : the Caraceni family. Ferdinando Caraceni was born in 1923 in Ortana a Mare. He share with it his name and his birthplace, but no family link. The clothing […]

GEORGES PEREC’S BUCKETLIST

“To begin with, there are the easy things to do, things I could do today, for instance: 1. Cruising on a river boat in Paris (…). Then there are the things that are a little more important, things that require decisions from me, things that I think if I did them, they would maybe make […]

COLLAR SHIRTS

Collars emerge in the Western world by the mid-15th century. They are then richly adorned and they quickly took extreme proportions, following the example of the well-known ruff from the second part of the 16th century. In the 17th century, also known as the Enlightenment, men, as if they were echoing the philosophers’ new ideas […]

THE STRIPES

« Man proposes and the stripe disposes. (…) In the stripe there is something that resists enclosure within systems. » – Michel Pastoureau Stripes are one of the most ancient patterns imagined by humans. During the Middle Ages, it is used to distinguish individuals excluded from society from whom it was better to stay away. […]

TOMMY NUTTER

One can’t talk about Tommy Nutter without mentioning two London streets : Savile Row and Abbey Road. Nutter and Edward Sexton’s shop, « Nutters of Savile Row » is, in 1969, the first new shop to open in over a century on this historic street of English tailoring. In the shop were displayed, among other […]

HEMS AND TURN-UPS

Trousers, until the early 19th century, were more of a pair of tights that got wider under the knee, and sometimes featured a cloth strip passing under the shoe to stretch them. In the mid-19th century emerges straight fit trousers, and with them two types of lower leg sections : hems and turn-ups. Workers were […]

HEELS

Heeled shoes make their first appearance at Persian horsemen’s feet at the end of the 16th century. Heels are then useful to help feet stay in the stirrups, a use that persisted with the Santiags (or cowboy boots). During the 17th century, French King Louis XIV wears heels covered with red leather to make himself […]

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