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Gangster Squad – Jerry’s Brown Double-Breasted Suit

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Ryan Gosling as Sgt. Jerry Wooters in Gangster Squad (2013).

Ryan Gosling as Sgt. Jerry Wooters in Gangster Squad (2013).

Vitals

Ryan Gosling as Jerry Wooters, dapper LAPD detective-sergeant

Los Angeles, August 1949

Film: Gangster Squad
Release Date: January 11, 2013
Director: Ruben Fleischer
Costume Designer: Mary Zophres

Background

Continuing BAMF Style’s recent string of neo-noir period film posts following a swaggering L.A. detective decked out in period attire, I decided to take another look at the recent movie Gangster Squad.

Described (by me) as L.A. Confidential for the video game crowd, Gangster Squad is loosely based on the true story of LAPD detectives John O’Mara and Jerry Wooters’ team that took a head-on approach to breaking Mickey Cohen’s rackets in the ’40s and ’50s. Although stylish, well-casted, and full of thrilling action pieces, Gangster Squad received some criticism for its lack of character development and condensing the multi-decade efforts of these detectives into just a few months in late 1949.

Facts were played with, narrative structure was ignored in favor of on-screen action, but the end result is still an entertaining, glossy look at the gangster-era L.A. we want to remember. Plus, I’ll never complain when a movie contains plenty of sharp vintage suits, alluring dames with dangling cigarettes, and nonstop Thompsons blasting away at each other.

Ryan Gosling plays Jerry Wooters, one of the real-life detectives assigned to the “Gangster Squad”. He is established early on as a Jack Vincennes-type, cynical about his police work, shifting his focus to getting laid and getting paid by any means necessary. This scene, set at Slapsy Maxie’s, establishes both of those end goals in the forms of Grace Faraday (Emma Stone) and Jack Whalen (Sullivan Stapleton), two of Cohen’s associates. Whalen was indeed a career criminal who worked as a mob contract killer and had actually served in the U.S. Army Air Force during WWII, but Grace was developed to give the film its needed femme fatale and give Gosling someone to hop into bed with.

What’d He Wear?

Mary Zophres has a fine reputation as a master of period costuming, accurately updating classic looks to convey both character-specific traits and modern appeal. With a resume that includes O Brother Where Art Thou?Catch Me If You CanNo Country for Old Men, and True Grit, Zophres has transcended genres and eras to prove that she can nicely outfit a rough Westerner or a sleek ’60s con man with equal aplomb. Her inspiration for Jerry Wooters came from “classic but stylish” leading men of the era like Clark Gable and Errol Flynn, as she explained to Entertainment Weekly. Wooters is easily the most fashionable of the main cast, fitting for his personality. Josh Brolin and his character John O’Mara evidently both approach clothing with the same utilitarian view and just wear what’s needed for the job. The others are equally well-outfitted from Robert Patrick’s old-fashioned lawman wearing a throwback duster to the heavily made-up Sean Penn taking Mickey Cohen’s fashion obsession to a new level of vanity.

Zophres used vintage examples to create the men’s suits. As she told British GQ in an article from the film’s release: “If you use a real suit that has been around for 60 years that isn’t in great shape – you can’t put Ryan Gosling or Josh Brolin in a suit with holes in the pockets. So we found original suits from the time period to get the general silhouette – sometimes it was the trouser from one pant and the jacket from another –  and then we would tailor it to the actors. We used Pae & Kim’s Custom Tailoring in LA, then we would duplicate it.”

Zophres continued, mentioning this suit and its specific role in Wooters’ evolution:

At one point early on, Ryan wears a three-piece double breasted. I was obsessed with that. At that point he has one foot inwith the gangsters and one foot as a cop. He is the only one of the Gangster Squad who wears double-breasted – but by the end, he’s wearing a three-piece single breasted suit. For Ryan’s sport coat, there was a couple of rolls of fabric we found in a store in LA called International Silk & Woolens. There were a couple of rolls of an old wool that was from the fifties, and we had enough for me to make six sports coats for Ryan.

The “three-piece double-breasted” suit mentioned is a sharp brown wool suit with a subtle blue pinstripe. Zophres created most of her suits with English wool, wisely telling British GQ that “you can’t find great wools in the United States”. Nothing thinner than a 10 oz. wool was used with 10 oz. and 12 oz. providing the majority of the suits plus some even heavier wools when texture and thickness were required. As cited in a People magazine article, Gosling himself told reporters at a Beverly Hills press event that: “The wool was quite itchy, so I had a rash… I channeled that irritation into my hatred for the gangsters.”

GANGSTER SQUAD

Wooters doesn’t have much hatred for gangsters early in the film as he enjoys a steak and a Scotch with Jack Whalen.

Wooters’ suit exemplifies the roomy, post-war fit that became fashionable as men broke away from the restricted (and restrictive) styles offered during the war; servicemen naturally had to sport their itchy uniforms everywhere while men at home were reduced to wearing old suits or the scanty, tight-fitting suits produced during the war’s fabric rationing. After the war and the rationing, men embraced long and loose jackets, vests, and pleated trousers. Hats grew larger while loud shirts, ties, and display handkerchiefs shouted out that the war was over and hedonistic comfort was in.

With casual attire also growing in popularity, men put much attention into the way they would dress up. Wooters’ suit jacket shows off the strapping profile that a man would desire with strong, padded shoulders with roped sleeveheads – emphasized by long peak lapels – a suppressed waist, and a long flared skirt for an athletic “hourglass” effect.

GANGSTER SQUAD

I won’t blame you for paying more attention to Emma Stone than the fit of Gosling’s suit. It took me some time before I even realized he was in this photo.

Zophres expressed her own appreciation of the post-war style in her interview with British GQ:

I also happen to think the shorter suit that is happening in men’s fashion right now is fine for the likes of Ryan Gosling but it’s not necessarily a look for the older gentleman. Maybe this movie will help make a little longer jacket come back – it’s a very flattering look.

Wooters’ brown pinstripe suit jacket has a low 6×2-buttoning double-breasted stance to accommodate both the length of the jacket and Gosling’s long torso on his 6′ frame. The three dark brown buttons on each cuff match those on the front. The jacket also has a welted breast pocket, straight flapped hip pockets, and a ventless back.

GANGSTER SQUAD

Wooters oozes confidence as he mixes casually with gangsters and shoeshine boys alike.

The large, wide peak lapels serve a double purpose of emphasizing the luxurious, sweeping fashions of a post-war suit jacket and emphasizing the strong shouldered silhouette. The lapels have slanted gorges on a seam that is relatively short given the length of the lapel points. There is a buttonhole on each lapel, and Wooters proudly pins a large white carnation on his left. “I miss that as I think it’s such a way to evoke confidence and romance in a man,” explained Zophres to British GQ. “You hardly ever see a guy with a boutonnière any more.”

GANGSTER SQUAD

Do you ever wonder why you leave the bar alone? Wooters doesn’t leave alone, and he’s sporting a boutonnière in his lapel. Make the connection.

Little of the rest of the suit is featured in this scene under the large jacket, but we get a few looks at the single-breasted matching vest with its five widely-spaced buttons with the lowest button correctly left open over the notched bottom.

GANGSTER SQUAD

A classy move like this never fails… although few nightclubs allow smoking these days >:-(

The trousers are likely pleated with a roomy fit through the legs down to the full break cuffed bottoms. The only aspects clearly seen are the side pockets and the turn-ups, which are not only appropriate to the era, but they had also served a surprising purpose for the real life Sgt. Wooters, as Gosling explained to People magazine:

While researching, the actor met with the family members of the man he plays, and learned about some of his character’s quirks. “His kids came to the set and told me a lot of stories and a lot of great details. Like, when he would ash his cigarette, he would ash into the cuff of his pants,” Gosling explained. “Then at the end of the day, he would dump out his cuffs, dump out all the ashes.”

Appropriately for the luxurious-fitting suits of the era, we see little of the shirt and tie underneath; thus, a fashion plate like Wooters works to ensure that his shirt and tie get noticed despite the suit’s best efforts. His sky blue silk dress shirt is printed with a distinctive geometric pattern that resembles a series of bird’s eyes. (NB: The shirt is not made of birdseye cotton cloth, which is much different.)

GANGSTER SQUAD

Wooters’ shirt also has a fashionably long point collar and rounded button cuffs.

GANGSTER SQUAD

Wooters’ rayon tie is surprisingly understated with a few sporadic white and blue floral spots on a russet brown ground.

GANGSTER SQUAD

Although most of the outfit was custom-made by Zophres and her team from period examples, the brown and cream perforated leather spectator shoes briefly featured in this scene were truly vintage according to a story that Zophres told British GQ:

There was a vendor named Ardis up in San Francisco who had these original shoes from the forties – he finds them in old estates. There was a pair of shoes that were two-tone, perforated, just beautiful. They don’t make shoes like that any more! And they just happened to be in Ryan’s size. He saw them and went “Oh my god, those are amazing.”

It’s good to know that Ryan Gosling appreciates fine style as much as his character does.

GANGSTER SQUAD

Despite the hubbub surrounding them, this is the only glimpse the scene gives us of Wooters’ vintage spectator shoes.

Wooters’ wide-brimmed fedora is another example of a true vintage product that made its way into production. The hat is brown felt with a thin, matching grosgrain ribbon and a pinched crown. It is unlined with the manufacturer’s silver logo printed on the underside of the crown.

Zophres worked hard to find and create the right hat for each character other than Wooters. Her interview with British GQ (which, as you can tell, was very helpful!) expands on that:

We made a lot of hats for everybody – it’s important to find the right one for each actor. Fit is so important. For Josh’s hat, he has a bigger head so we tried fifty hats on him. To tell you the truth, in the end we took the crown from one hat and the brim from another and had Optimo make his hats in the perfect medium brown. Whereas Ryan wore all original hats – we only made duplicates because he needed some doubles. Then we made Sean Penn’s at Optimo also, on a pattern of hat made in the Twenties.

GANGSTER SQUAD

Gosling struts around the set in his vintage fedora, which ironically gets its most screen time when he takes it off.

As one might expect from a flashy celebrity cop who takes pride in his appearance, Wooters accessorizes on each hand. He wears a gold ring with a large dark brown stone on his right pinky, and a stainless dress watch with a yellow rectangular dial is fastened to his left wrist on a brown leather strap.

GANGSTER SQUAD

Wooters subtly shows off his accessories.

Zophres concluded her discussion with British GQ with:

Two things. Firstly, that tailoring is hugely important. If your waist is a little big, fix it. If your shoulders are drooping down, it can be fixed with an easy alteration. The second and the biggest thing is when wear a suit, don’t be afraid to dress up. I think it’s become cool to dress down, but there’s nothing more handsome than a man in a suit.

This is coming from a Hollywood costume designer, fellas. Suit up.

How to Get the Look

Wooters’ nightclub suit is a great example of updating classic fashion to appeal to modern men without sacrificing accuracy. Comfort and class – with hints of indulgence – defined men’s post-war style, and this is a good illustration of getting that combination right.

Ryan Gosling as Sgt. Jerry Wooters in Gangster Squad (2013).

  • Brown wool three-piece custom-tailored suit with subtle blue pinstripe, consisting of:
    • Double-breasted long, loose jacket with wide peak lapels, 6×2-button front, welted breast pocket, straight flapped hip pockets, 3-button cuffs, and ventless back
    • Single-breasted vest with 5-button front and notched bottom
    • Pleated trousers with side pockets and turn-ups/cuffed bottoms
  • Sky blue geometric printed silk shirt with long point collar and rounded button cuffs
  • Russet brown rayon necktie with white and blue floral spots
  • Brown & cream two-tone perforated leather spectator shoes
  • Brown felt wide-brimmed fedora with a narrow grosgrain ribbon
  • Gold pinky ring with large brown stone, worn on right pinky
  • Stainless wristwatch with yellow rectangular dial and brown leather strap, worn on left wrist

For his night out on the town, Wooters wears a large white carnation on his left lapel.

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the movie.

The Quote

Grace: What’s your racket, handsome?
Jerry: I’m a bible salesman.
Grace: Want to take me away from all this and make an honest woman out of me?
Jerry: No ma’am, I was just hoping to take you to bed.



To Catch a Thief: Cary Grant’s Gray Summer Blazer

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Cary Grant and Grace Kelly in To Catch a Thief (1955).

Cary Grant and Grace Kelly in To Catch a Thief (1955).

Vitals

Cary Grant as John Robie, retired cat burglar and jewel thief

Cannes, French Riviera, Summer 1954

Film: To Catch a Thief
Release Date: August 5, 1955
Director: Alfred Hitchcock
Costume Designer: Edith Head

Background

Summer is officially here!* Anyone looking for a way to stand out in your summer duds should take a cue from Cary Grant, which is never a bad idea when it comes to style.

Grant himself never understood why he was regarded as such a fashion icon, as he explained to GQ during his now-classic editorial from 1958:

I’m often asked for advice or an opinion about clothes, and I always try to answer the best I can, but I’m not inclined to regard myself as an authority on the subject. Many times during my years in films, some well-meaning group has selected me as best-dressed man of the year, but I’ve never understood why. The odd distinction surprises me: first, because I don’t consider myself especially well dressed, and, secondly, I’ve never, as far as I can compare the efforts of others with my own, gone to any special trouble to acquire clothes that could be regarded as noticeably fashionable or up-to-date.

Perhaps it’s just his modesty talking, but it’s damn near impossible to watch any Cary Grant film without wanting to add a few more well-tailored suits and sport coats to your wardrobe. One of my favorite films that shows off Grant’s impeccable style is To Catch a Thief, one of Hitchcock’s most charming flicks due to its relatively low stakes and the pairing of two of his favorite leads – the debonair Cary Grant and the elegant Grace Kelly. Both Grant and Kelly get a chance to show off their comedic and romantic chops against the stunning backdrop of a summer in the French Riviera.

Grant brings his style A-game to some of his outfits in the film, including a fine gray business suit and a sterling example of black tie for an evening of gambling and romancing. One of his most unique and remembered ensembles is the gray blazer, day cravat, and slacks worn for his day out with Grace Kelly.

* At least it’s summer for us folks up in the Northern Hemisphere…

What’d He Wear?

Do I have any special do’s and don’t’s about clothes? I can’t think of any rules about clothes, since there really aren’t any…

… and thus spake Cary Grant himself, again from the 1958 GQ editorial. If any man deserves to be a snob about clothing, it’s Cary Grant, and here he is saying just the opposite as he follows the Outback Steakhouse maxim of “no rules, just right”.

Still, just because he’s no snob doesn’t mean he’s a slob. John Robie dresses for his excursion to the beach – and subsequent scenic picnic – in a gray flannel blazer, white cotton shirt over a dotted day cravat, tan slacks, and tassel loafers. This distinctive look is both masculine and timeless, following Grant’s own sartorial maxim of dressing like a man for all ages.

TO CATCH A THIEF

The gentleman’s gentleman.

Robie’s gray blazer is constructed from a lightweight flannel. Summer-weight flannel can be difficult to find on modern clothing, so a comfortable hopsack woven blazer would also work nicely.

The blazer is single-breasted with sharp notch lapels – with a buttonhole in the left lapel – and three gold buttons on the front.

TO CATCH A THIEF

Robie avoids the tourist swimmer’s dilemma of walking through the lobby soaking wet by changing his clothes at the beach.

Grant causes some controversy among sartorial purists by the way he buttons his blazer in this sequence. The decided “rule” for 3-button jackets is “sometimes, always, never” from top to bottom. Grant spends the first few scenes in the Carlton Hotel with all three buttons fastened. This becomes especially noticeable and awkward when Robie wears his hands in his trouser pockets in the Stevens’ hotel room and bunches all three buttons together.

One might be tempted to criticize this gesture, but one should also keep in mind that:

a) Grant did say “there really aren’t any” rules about clothing, and
b) Cary Grant will forever be a classic example of the charismatic and romantic leading man that makes every woman’s heart flutter. Neither you nor I have any room to talk.

TO CATCH A THIEF

Grant brazenly ignores some major sartorial “rules” while a disapproving John Williams looks on behind him.

As I mention in my North by Northwest post (which, as my first post, could use some serious revision!), Cary Grant had a habit of placing his hands in his pockets and thus preferred double vents on his suits. This blazer isn’t helped by its short single rear vent when Grant keeps his hands in his pockets in the hotel room – as seen in the above screenshots.

The blazer sleeves have roped sleeveheads and two gold buttons at the end of each cuff. The natural shoulders have a slight concave like the “pagoda” shoulder structure.

TO CATCH A THIEF

In keeping with its informal context, the blazer’s three external pockets are all large patch pockets with rounded bottoms – one on the left breast and one on each hip.

TO CATCH A THIEF

Thanks to Grant’s long torso and 6’2″ frame, the blazer bunching doesn’t look as bad when he’s standing up.

Grant wears a plain white cotton shirt underneath his blazer with a front placket and rear side darts. The cuffs are very large and close with a single centered button with no button on the open gauntlet. Although he advocated wearing subtly elegant links on French cuff shirts, Grant was also a believer in the simpler button cuff, saying in his GQ editorial:

Button-cuffed shirts are simplest to manage…

TO CATCH A THIEF

Grant goes cravat-less when alone in his suite.

The shirt’s large collar is structured with a moderate spread and elongated points, though not to the extent seen on shirts earlier in the decade. Some sources believe Grant wore a button-down collar shirt in this sequence due to how well the collar stays contained under his jacket, but it is clearly a standard collar that keeps in place without the help of buttons or tabs. The length of the points and a little bit of TLC is all that the shirt collar needed.

TO CATCH A THIEF

A pensive John Robie.

Under his shirt collar, Grant radiates a sense of countryside cool with a dark navy blue day cravat. The day cravat adds subtle elegance – the key to Grant’s timeless style – while practically serving to catch any sweat. Essentially a loosely-tied scarf worn under the shirt, the day cravat is the most comfortable and casual form of neckwear that adds a gentlemanly devil-may-care touch to any outfit.

John Robie’s day cravat is dark navy with small white pin-dots. Primarily only the dots are seen under the collar, but occasionally the cravat slips up on his neck and the white diagonal stripes (left-down-to-right) are seen peeking out under the dots.

TO CATCH A THIEF

The lower half of Robie’s resortwear retains the simple sophistication of the top. The stone-colored trousers rise fashionably high on Grant’s torso and appear to be a comfortable and soft summer-weight material like a linen twill blend. Grant himself advocated cotton poplin suits and trousers, as specified in the 1958 editorial:

During summer, I’ve taken to wearing light beige, washable poplin suits. They’re inexpensive and, if kept crisp and clean, acceptable almost anywhere at any time, even in the evening… Learn to dispense with accessories that don’t perform a necessary function. I use belts, for example, only with blue jeans, which I wear when riding, and content myself with side loops, that can be tightened at the waistband, on business suits.

TO CATCH A THIEF

These double forward-pleated trousers may be the very style that Grant had in mind with the belt-less waistband that fastens on the sides with button tabs. The extended waistband in the front also closes on the right with a double-button closure.

The trousers also have four outer pockets: a deep, slightly slanted hand pocket on each side and two jetted rear pockets that close through a button.

TO CATCH A THIEF

I wish we had gotten a scene of Cary Grant water-skiing as the SKI NAUTIQUE sign advertises. That would’ve just been cool.

Grant’s trousers have a luxurious roomy fit throughout the hips and legs with slightly flared bottoms that add a gentle swagger to his walk. The bottoms are cuffed despite Grant’s personal belief against their practicality:

A tip about trousers. Trouser cuffs seem to me unnecessary, and are apt to catch lint and dust. However, whether you prefer cuffs or not, ask the tailor to sew a strip of cloth of the same material, or a tape of similar color, on the inside at the bottom of the trouser leg where it rubs the heel of the shoe. It will keep your trouser-bottoms from fraying.

TO CATCH A THIEF

Robie and Francie enjoy a nice stroll down to their local villa.

Robie wears brown loafers, specifically a pair of apron toe tassel loafers in saddle tan calfskin leather with interwoven leather lace on the sides. Grant was known to be an advocate of softer-heeled driving moccasins, but these are standard loafers with hard leather soles. He wears them with a pair of tan ribbed cotton dress socks that nicely carry the leg line between the trousers and the shoes.

TO CATCH A THIEF

Robie forgets he has no brake pedal on the passenger side.

Robie’s single accessory is a thin gold chain around his neck with a round gold pendant. Due to the day cravat, we only see it when he’s swimming.

TO CATCH A THIEF

Conjugating a few irregular verbs…

And while he is swimming, Robie sports a pair of beige cotton bathing trunks with an elastic waistband. The shorts are longer than the skimpier mens’ swimming trunks of the era, and they still rise high to Grant’s belly button. Although cotton swimming trunks aren’t very common these days, you can still find vintage pairs like these similar Jantzens.

TO CATCH A THIEF

Evidently, both Cary Grant’s and Grace Kelly’s outfits from this scene were auctioned by Debbie Reynolds for Profiles in History in 2011, described as “key costumes by Edith Head, from the romantic scenic drive in a convertible overlooking Cannes,” although I haven’t been able to find the results or any additional auction details.

A few parting words from Grant himself:

Don’t be a snob about the way you dress. Snobbery is only a point in time. Be tolerant and helpful to the other fellow – he is yourself yesterday… If a man wears the kind of clothes that please him, then – providing they’re clean and don’t shock society, morals, and little children – what is the difference as long as that man is happy?

Go Big or Go Home

If To Catch a Thief were remade sixty years later, the contemporary title would probably be #FirstWorldProblems. An infamous ex-cat burglar who now lives tending vineyards in France is forced to go on the run… to the French Riviera, of course, where he stays at the exclusive Carlton Hotel in Cannes. The Carlton Hotel is still thriving with rates ranging anywhere from $1,500 to $7,600 for a single night.

TO CATCH A THIEF

They’ll leave the light on for you.

While at the hotel, the burglar meets a glamorous American socialite, Frances Stevens, and her wealthy mother. After an impromptu kiss (which makes Robie declare he was “awed by its efficiency”), Francie takes Robie down to the beach where she memorably trades barbs with his jealous teenage French accomplice, Danielle:

Robie: Say somthing nice to her, Danielle.
Danielle: She looks a lot older up close.

Francie decides that this fella ain’t so bad, even if he is a cat burglar (as she quickly deduces) and takes him out in her blue Sunbeam Alpine roadster for a car chase and subsequent picnic.

TO CATCH A THIEF

After she deftly dodges a pursuing car, Francie stops at a beautiful spot overlooking Alpes-Maritimes where she confronts her date with the knowledge that he is, in fact, John Robie the jewel thief and that she, in fact, doesn’t care. (Despite having the most jewels of anyone in the Riviera!)

TO CATCH A THIEF

Not the typical American tourists…

Putting any serious discussions aside, Francie pulls out some beer and fried chicken to have a decidedly American picnic. Despite being unmasked as a career criminal, Robie can’t help but to dig in.

TO CATCH A THIEF

…although they are enjoying a typical American lunch.

My knowledge of 1950s beer bottle labels isn’t what it should be… does anyone know what brew Cary and Grace are sipping here?

How to Get the Look

Especially in later films like To Catch a Thief, Cary Grant always showed off his sense of style with timeless clothing. With the help of legendary costume designer Edith Head, Grant shows off an ideal resortwear outfit for his daytime outing with Francie.

TCAT2-crop2-full

  • Gray flannel single-breasted blazer with 3 gold front buttons, patch breast pocket, patch hip pockets, 2 gold cuff buttons, and short single rear vent
  • Stone-colored double forward-pleated summer-weight high rise trousers with front waistband double-button tab, button-tab side adjusters, slanted side pockets, button-closing jetted rear pockets, and turn-ups/cuffed bottoms
  • White cotton shirt with large point collar, front placket, rear side darts, and rounded button cuffs
  • Dark navy blue pin-dot day cravat
  • Saddle tan brown calfskin leather apron-toe tassel loafers
  • Tan ribbed cotton dress socks
  • Small gold pendant on thin gold chain

Cotton swimming trunks are pretty rare these days but a light color – like the beige pair worn by Grant at the beach – is a nice way to show off a strong tan.

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the movie.

The Quote

Don’t let the robbery spoil your day. It’s only money, and not even yours at that!


The Wolf of Wall Street: Leo’s Floral Swimwear

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I’m off to the beach for my annual vacation! I’ll have my phone, but I eschew technology when surrounded by sun, sand, water, and books, so I’ll be less responsive to comments and e-mails than usual (and I know I already need some improvement in that area!)

There’ll be a few posts planned for the course of this week, but here’s a quick snippet of a BAMF in relaxation mode that we should all try and emulate.

Leonardo DiCaprio and Margot Robbie as Jordan and Naomi Belfort in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013).

Leonardo DiCaprio and Margot Robbie as Jordan and Naomi Belfort in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013).

Vitals

Leonardo DiCaprio as Jordan Belfort, swaggering stockbroker

New York City, Summer 1993

Film: The Wolf of Wall Street
Release Date: December 25, 2013
Director: Martin Scorsese
Costume Designer: Sandy Powell

How to Get the Look

The Wolf of Wall Street gives us a quick look at Jordan and Naomi relaxing on his yacht. He doesn’t have a care in the world as he lays next to his beautiful wife and wears:

  • Navy blue short-sleeve linen shirt with six white buttons down plain front and straight-hemmed bottom
  • Light blue “Hawaiian printed” polyester swimming trunks with a palm tree and orange floral print

His Ray-Ban Wayfarer sunglasses with black acetate frames, a fine choice for a successful young fella on holiday, sit on the back on his head against the pillow.

If you’ve got a special lady friend with you who also would like some shades, Margot Robbie is wearing a pair of brown plastic-framed Versace 477/B 915 sunglasses with gold Greek key temple logos.

Supposedly, Jordan’s swimwear is a pair of vintage-inspired Tommy Bahama board shorts, but I haven’t found confirmation of that. Belfort himself mentions a pair of “blue nylon” swimming trunks in his follow-up book, Catching the Wolf of Wall Street.

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the movie. Belfort’s original book was one of my beach reading materials during this trip last year, and it’s definitely an entertaining read.


Casino – Ace’s Ivory Western Suit with Red-on-Red Silk

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Robert De Niro as Sam "Ace" Rothstein in Casino (1995).

Robert De Niro as Sam “Ace” Rothstein in Casino (1995).

Vitals

Robert De Niro as Sam “Ace” Rothstein, Vegas casino executive and mob associate

Las Vegas, Summer 1977

Film: Casino
Release Date: November 22, 1995
Director: Martin Scorsese
Costume Design: John A. Dunn & Rita Ryack

Background

By the mid-1970s, Frank “Lefty” Rosenthal appeared to have it all. Having tried his hardest to leave his mob affiliations behind him back east, he was now running the Stardust Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas with a beautiful ex-showgirl wife and a massive wardrobe pull of bespoke suits and sport coats.

Unfortunately, his mob affiliations were chasing him to Vegas in the form of vicious Chicago enforcer Tony “the Ant” Spilotro; he still didn’t have a license to legally be managing his casino; and his troubled wife Geri was still in contact with her shitty ex, Lenny Marmor.

Twenty years later, Martin Scorsese and Nicholas Pileggi teamed up to tell Lefty’s life story, starring De Niro as Lefty’s cinematic counterpart Sam “Ace” Rothstein. Tony Spilotro, Geri Rosenthal, and Lenny Marmor became Nicky Santoro (Joe Pesci), Ginger Rothstein (Sharon Stone), and Lester Diamond (James Woods). One scene in the film depicts a real-life incident where Ace tracked down his wife handing a stack of cash to her ex-lover in a Vegas diner. Ace saunters in, tossing a matching stack of cash on the table before threatening Lester’s life. Lester takes the hint and scrapes up his dignity before swaggering outside, where he is beaten and left in his blue ’76 Eldorado.

What’d He Wear?

Ace knows what’s going to happen before he even enters the diner, and he dresses to convey confidence and power. It takes a confident man to wear a white suit at all, and the red shirt and tie evokes the blood that will be spilled that day… and both Ace and Lester know it’s not going to be Ace’s blood.

CASINO

Ace wears an ivory polyester Western-styled two-piece suit. The Western styling is most evident on the pinch-back jacket with pointed “V” chest yokes that wrap over the shoulders to form a center pointed “V” in the back. Below that rear point is the single pleat that gives the “pinch-back” jacket its moniker. The pleat extends down to the half-belted back. Below the back is a long single rear vent that falls on the same vertical axis as the pinch-back pleat.

CASINO

Ace escorts Ginger out of the restaurant… and into his yellow ’78 Cadillac Eldorado Biarritz.

The front of the jacket is single-breasted with two steel buttons. The inset hip pockets close with a steel button on a “V”-pointed flap that matches the chest yokes above them. The three buttons on each cuff are the same flat-faced steel as the buttons on the front and on the pockets.

CASINO

Ever the gentleman, Ace greets his wife’s lover with a handshake… even having the courtesy to transfer his cigarette to his other hand.

Ace’s matching suit trousers are flat front with an extended waistband tab that closes on the right with a concealed hook. Not much else is seen of the trousers, but they have a large fit and flared bottoms.

Ace provides a strong contrast against his ivory suit by wearing a dark red silk shirt. It is styled like the rest of his super-’70s shirts with a large point collar and the distinctive tab cuffs that close on a single button. This was a very popular cuff style in the late ’70s and even made its way on to a few of the Frank Foster-made shirts for Roger Moore as James Bond in films like Moonraker.

CASINO

Ace takes a quick second to register that yes, he has indeed been betrayed, before going into charismatic badass mode.

The wide silk necktie he wears is the same shade of dark red as the shirt, a monochromatic palette that gained a brief revival in the early 2000s when Regis Philbin started his own clothing line after his matching metallic shirts and ties on Who Wants to be a Millionaire? evidently resonated with audiences.

Ace would later wear this same shirt and tie combination when he escorts Ginger to dinner after she attempted to kidnap their daughter and run off with Lester. Perhaps he wears the same shirt and tie as a subtle reminder for Ginger as to what he was wearing the last time he caught her with Lester? (For the later dinner scene, he wears a blue and green plaid suit.)

We don’t see Ace’s footwear at all during this scene, and I would suspect that he would be sporting one of his many pairs of white shoes. However, the now-popular poster that includes an artistic rendering of all the suits De Niro wears in Casino shows him wearing a pair of dark red shoes that would match his shirt and tie. While this may just be artistic license, part of me wonders if artist Ibraheem Youssef knows something I don’t…

There’s much less ambiguity with Ace’s ever-present gold accessories, expressly chosen in this scene to match his red shirt and tie. His flat gold wristwatch has a plain red dial on the rectangular case and is fastened to his right wrist by a gold link bracelet.

CASINO

A close-up from a DVD featurette provides even greater detail of Ace’s outfit-specific jewelry.

On the pinky of his same hand, Ace wears a gold ring with a ruby stone. Again, Bvlgari showed up plenty as the provider of Ginger’s jewelry, but I still haven’t received any confirmation as to who made De Niro’s many watches and rings.

Go Big or Go Home

What’s a classic diner without doo wop on the jukebox, right? This scene is scored by The Velvetones’ 1957 version of “The Glory of Love”, a nice juxtaposition to the three people who are being ravaged by love rather than feeling its “glory”; Ace is betrayed, Ginger is conflicted, and Lester just gets his ass beaten.

The song had been written more than 20 years earlier by Billy Hill when it became an instant hit for Benny Goodman and his Orchestra – with Helen Ward on vocals – in May 1936. Coincidentally enough, the real Geri McGee Rosenthal was born in 1936!

How to Get the Look

Ace’s outfit is a strange combination that blends gangster style with the cowboy influence that was present when Vegas was initially founded.

Casino30-crop

  • Ivory polyester Western-styled suit, consisting of:
    • Single-breasted pinch-back jacket with edge-stitched notch lapels, 2-button front (steel buttons), pointed-flap hip pockets (w/ steel button closure), 3-button cuffs (steel buttons), and pleated half-belt back with single rear vent
    • Flat front trousers with extended waistband tab and flared bottoms
  • Dark red silk dress shirt with large point collar, front placket, and button-tab cuffs
  • Dark red silk necktie
  • Gold wristwatch with a rectangular case, red dial, and flat link bracelet
  • Gold pinky ring with ruby stone

If you want to wear a white suit in Vegas but this ain’t your cup of tea, check out Rusty Ryan’s white striped ensemble from Ocean’s Thirteen.

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the movie.

The Quote

From my recollection, aren’t you the card shark, the golf hustler, the pimp from Beverly Hills? If I’m wrong, please correct me ’cause I never knew you to be a heist man. But if you are, you know what? Here, take mine too. Go ahead, take it, ’cause you already have hers… But if you ever come back again – ever – to take her money, next time bring a pistol. That way you got a chance. Be a man, don’t be a fucking pimp. Now, you wanna do me a favor? Get outta here. I wanna be alone with my wife. Get up and get outta here.


Justified – Raylan’s Double Denim and Red Plaid Shirt

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Timothy Olyphant as Deputy U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens in Justified (Episode 2.11: "Full Commitment", 2011).

Timothy Olyphant as Deputy U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens on Justified (Episode 2.11: “Full Commitment”, 2011).

Vitals

Timothy Olyphant as Raylan Givens, old-fashioned and stoic Deputy U.S. Marshal

Harlan County, Kentucky, Spring 2010

Series: Justified
Episodes: “Fixer” (Episode 1.03), “The Collection” (Episode 1.06), and “Full Commitment” (Episode 2.11)
Air Dates: March 30, 2010 (1.03), April 20, 2010 (1.06), and April 20, 2011 (2.11)
Directors: Fred Keller (1.03), Rob Holcomb (1.06), and Peter Werner (2.11)
Costume Designers: Ane Crabtree (Season 1) & Patia Prouty (Season 2)

Background

When America needed an American hero, Elmore Leonard gave us Raylan Givens. An independent-minded, old-fashioned, and gun-handy lawman, Raylan sees himself more as John Wayne than John McClane. The series began by establishing him as a no-nonsense U.S. Marshal who backs up his word when he gives a “gun thug” 24 hours to leave town. Once he’s transferred back to his birthplace among the blue-collar hillfolk of eastern Kentucky, he’s far more at home in his cowboy hat, riding boots, and jeans than he was in Miami.

The first few episodes allow both the show and Raylan to find a groove with a more episodic format before settling into a more serial narrative for the rest of the show’s run. Although “case-of-the-week” shows can grow irritating, Justified made the most of it with clever plots worthy of Elmore Leonard himself and colorful guest stars that helped the content stand out far more than your standard Law and Order or CSI could even aspire to, all the while dropping hints about Raylan’s backstory before it all comes to a crescendo later in the first season.

Though he always dresses up on duty in at least a sport coat and tie, Raylan prefers simpler denim-happy casual attire befitting his bucolic roots. To celebrate the 4th of July tomorrow, BAMF Style is going to pull examples from three episodes – “Fixer”, “The Collection”, and “Full Commitment” – that show how Raylan incorporated red, white, and blue into his typical “denim sandwich”.

What’d He Wear?

Raylan Givens is a master of a look that is often considered a sartorial “no-no” due to the endless possibilities of getting it wrong – a denim jacket and jeans.

JUSTIFIED

Raylan displays bafflement that his simple country style made it onto a blog celebrating sartorial excellence.

This look is known by many names ranging from the Texas Tuxedo and Canadian Tuxedo (which would’ve been more appropriate when Olyphant played Canadian-born Seth Bullock on Deadwood) to double denim and, my favorite, the denim sandwich. Raylan sports a denim sandwich often and in each of the show’s six seasons, sometimes even with a wool overcoat over it to soften the look.

I still need to watch the show’s final season (I know, I know!), but I have so far seen Raylan sporting his denim jacket and jeans look in five separate combinations. The most common shirt accompaniment by far is a dark blue henley, although he also wears dark layered shirts, a dark shirt over a light-colored henley, and even a purple shirt on many different occasions based on the episode and context. Since we’re celebrating the 4th of July, BAMF Style is gonna take a look at an All-American red, white, and blue look as Raylan pairs his denim sandwich with red, white, and blue plaid shirts.

JUSTIFIED

I never realized how much time Raylan spent looking totally nonplussed.

First – the jacket. The familiar red “e tab” tag on the left pocket flap tells us that this is a genuine Levi’s trucker jacket constructed of blue stonewashed denim. The jacket has horizontal front yokes that end below the second button and just above the pockets. The back has a separate yoke with horizontal stitching across the shoulder blades. The fit is straight and comfortable, hitting just below the hip. Two vertical seams extend down from the chest pocket top to the adjustable waistband.

Raylan’s jacket has four outer pockets. The two patch pockets on the chest are pointed with more dramatic Western-style pointed flaps that close through a steel button. The two lower pockets on each side are welted for easy hand access; the handwarmer pockets were added to Levi’s denim jackets in mid-1980. The waistband is slightly adjustable with a small buttoned strap on each side. Raylan wears his jacket cuffs buttoned. All buttons – including the six buttons down the front – are aluminum stud buttons.

JUSTIFIED

Although Raylan’s particular jacket is no longer available from Levi’s, their popular Trucker Jacket has been “leading the pack” since 1962 – according to the Levi’s site. Denim Hunters has a helpful guide if you’re curious when your vintage Levi’s denim jacket was made.

Raylan wisely contrasts his medium blue denim jacket with his darker blue wash denim jeans. Raylan typically wears Levi’s jeans as well with a straight bootcut leg, belt loops, a zipper fly, and the standard five-pocket layout: two front pockets, right coin pocket, and two rear patch pockets.

JUSTIFIED

Grocery shopping is relatively simple with Raylan Givens.

The denim sandwich is Raylan’s favorite off-duty look, and he twice sports it with two different red, white, and blue plaid shirts. The first instance is during the final scenes of “Fixer” (Episode 1.03) when he pays Ava a late night visit. The second instance is for most of “Full Commitment” (Episode 2.11) when Tim is assigned to guard him all day.

In both instances, he wears his Steston San Angelo “Marshall” cattleman’s hat in “ranch tan” 4X wool with a 4″ brim. The same hat is available from HatCountry.com for around $130, a small price to pay for badassery.

JUSTIFIED

Raylan shows various degrees of enthusiasm based on his audience.

Both plaid shirts have long sleeves with button cuffs, black buttons down a front placket, and double patch pockets that close on the chest with buttoned flaps.

The first season shirt is Tartan plaid flannel, consisting of bold red, white, and dark blue criss-crossing stripes under a red multi-windowpane overcheck.

JUSTIFIED

Raylan also wears the shirt three episodes later when visiting Boyd in the lockup.

We see much more of the “Full Commitment” plaid shirt; this shirt has a warmer red flannel ground with a fine white and blue shadow plaid overcheck. The overcheck rotates 45° on each pocket to create an “X” plaid illusion. This shirt is also reinforced with a light blue-gray lining that calls out the gray shadow of the blue check. The chest pocket flaps are slim with rounded corners. Raylan wears the cuffs unbuttoned but only rolls the shirt partially up past his wrist.

JUSTIFIED

Raylan wears the “Full Commitment” shirt open to reveal a gray cotton crew neck t-shirt. This short-sleeve t-shirt is a solid medium gray rather than the commonly seen heathered gray. He always sports a white ribbed cotton sleeveless undershirt as his base torso layer.

Raylan also sticks with his usual footwear, a pair of custom-made Lucchese dark “cigar” brown ostrich leg Western-style cowboy boots with decorative stitching on the calf leather shafts. A pair of these would typically go for around $1,000 per pair which would be steep for anyone but Raylan who wears absolutely no footwear other than his “fairly new” boots.

Matthew McConaughey isn't the only BAMF on TV who prefers Lincolns.

Matthew McConaughey isn’t the only American BAMF on TV who prefers Lincolns.

Raylan sticks with the matching belt and shoes rule by wearing a brown tooled leather belt. Both on and off duty, he carries his Glock 17 in a tan-finished full grain leather Bianchi Model 59 Special Agent® thumb break paddle holster. His particular model would be the #19128, which is fitted for a right-hand shooter carrying a 4.49″-barreled full size Glock.

JUSTIFIED

Raylan keeps his accessories simple. On his left wrist is the same TAG Heuer Series 6000 Chronometer wristwatch that he wears throughout most of the show with its brushed steel case, white dial, and brown alligator strap. (Thanks to Teeritz for the definitive ID!)

Despite the abundance of hardened criminals and murderers in Raylan's orbit, most Justified fans agree that there's no one worse than GARY.

Despite the abundance of hardened criminals and murderers in Raylan’s orbit, most Justified fans agree that there’s no one worse than GARY.

Raylan also wears his sole piece of jewelry, a silver horseshoe ring on the third finger of this right hand.

Go Big or Go Home

…or go to Kentucky for a true Raylan Givens breakfast.

Raylan: I was just gonna pick up some ice cream.
Tim: Ice cream for breakfast?
Raylan: Yeah, it’s got eggs, milk…

Ever the individualist, not just any ice cream will do for Raylan’s breakfast. He specifically hunts down Chaney’s, which USA Today voted the #1 ice cream in Kentucky.

JUSTIFIED

“Plus, these guys carry Chaney’s.”

Chaney’s Dairy Barn is located in Bowling Green, about 230 miles west of Harlan. The Chaney family had lived on the farm since 1888 and became a dairy farm in 1940, but it wasn’t until September 2003 that Chaney’s Dairy Barn opened to a receptive public. According to Chaney’s Dairy Barn’s Facebook page, the Justified team reached out to Chaney’s to get them on the show. Either way, its appearance on the show is certainly a nice nod to its locale (especially when accompanying the Ale-8-One bottle signs in the background).

How to Get the Look

Raylan’s cowboy-infused denim sandwich is epitomic of his old-fashioned American spirit. It takes a certain kind of man with a certain kind of confidence to strut around in double denim with a cowboy hat and boots, but we can all agree that Raylan is just the sort of man who can pull that off. Can you?

JustifiedDenRed-crop

  • Blue stonewashed denim Levi’s trucker jacket with pointed chest pocket flaps, welted handwarmer side pockets, 6-button front, button cuffs, and adjustable waistband
  • Dark blue denim Levi’s bootcut jeans
  • Red, white, and blue plaid flannel long-sleeve shirt with front placket (with black buttons), two patch chest pockets with button-down flaps, and button cuffs
  • Stetson Marshall 4x wool ranch tan cattleman’s hat with a thin tooled leather band
  • Lucchese “cigar”-colored brown ostrich leg Western-style boots with decorative stitched calf leather shafts
  • Dark brown tooled leather belt with a dulled steel single-claw buckle
  • Tan full grain leather Bianchi Model 59 Special Agent® paddle holster for a full-size Glock pistol
  • TAG Heuer Series 6000 Chronometer wristwatch with brushed steel case, white dial, and brown alligator strap
  • Silver horseshoe ring

For a more casual or cooler day when he wears his shirt open, Raylan opts for a crew neck gray t-shirt rather than the more revealing white sleeveless undershirt.

The Gun

Even though he’s technically suspended in “Full Commitment”, Raylan still makes good use of his Glock 17 sidearm. Although he identifies it earlier in the series as a “.45 Glock” (suggesting a Glock 21), a closer look at the bore and the “17” imprint on the sides confirms that he indeed carries the 9×19 mm Glock 17.

JUSTIFIED

If only Raylan would’ve turned around and shot Gary, the world would have been a happier place.

While Raylan’s choice of a full-size Glock is correct, the issued sidearm for the U.S. Marshal Service is actually the .40-caliber Glock series (full-size 22, compact 23, and subcompact 27 for backup).

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the entire series. The screenshots featured here are from the first and second seasons.

If you’re looking for these episodes in particular…

  • “Fixer” (Episode 1.03) features Raylan standing tall against the inept debt collectors who kidnapped a bookie. Mostly a stand-alone episode until the end when Raylan shows up at Ava’s door… sporting a denim jacket and jeans for the first time!
  • “The Collection” (Episode 1.06) finds Raylan meeting an art collector, played by fellow Deadwood alum Peter Jason, for a case of fraud that quickly turns into a murder investigation. Again, mostly a stand-alone episode save for a sub-plot with ex-wife Winona and the beginning when Raylan talks to Boyd in jail, wearing the same plaid shirt from his late-night visit to Ava’s in “Fixer”.
  • “Full Commitment” (Episode 2.11) is an entertaining hour deep in the narrative of the superlative second season as Raylan is forced to take protection from his fellow Marshals, including a beleaguered but cool-as-usual Tim.

The Quote

As long as you understand that the next time we have this conversation, there won’t be a conversation.


Bond’s Casual Brown Linen in Japan

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Sean Connery as James Bond in You Only Live Twice (1967).

Sean Connery as James Bond in You Only Live Twice (1967).

Vitals

Sean Connery as James Bond, sophisticated British MI6 agent

Miyazaki, Japan, Summer 1966

Film: You Only Live Twice
Release Date: June 13, 1967
Director: Lewis Gilbert
Wardrobe Master: Eileen Sullivan

Background

For the 00-7th of July, I’m revisiting one of my least favorite films in the James Bond franchise: You Only Live Twice. This movie polarizes Bond fans; some enjoy it for the spectacular action and adventure elements and Donald Pleasance’s iconic turn as Blofeld while others feel as bored as Sean Connery himself by the formulaic and over-the-top plot.

Even YOLT fans can’t deny that this marked the first major departure from Ian Fleming’s original plots, keeping the Japan setting and several characters intact while replacing Bond’s fatalistic revenge-driven quest with a conventional action piece. You Only Live Twice evidently provided much of the fodder for spy parodies, most notably the Austin Powers franchise, which featured another scarred, Mao-suited villain in his volcano lair full of identically-dressed henchmen and poor marksmen.

Story was also tossed out in favor of gadgets and spectacle, best exemplified by Little Nellie, the heavily armed WA-116 autogyro delivered to him by Q. Little Nellie has the dubious distinction of managing to be both the most and least cool gadget in the Bond franchise. The original design, invented by RAF Wing Commander Ken Wallis (who flew Little Nellie in the movie), would be a practical and useful item for a spy, allowing him to fly a compact craft for visual recon. Unfortunately:

a) It was fucking YELLOW. Not exactly the pigment of stealth.
2) Connery still had to wear a helmet. If he fell out of that thing, I don’t think a cheap white helmet is gonna be the life or death factor. It’s not like little kids would stop wearing helmets on their personal helicopters if they saw James Bond wasn’t wearing his.
c) The yellow thing again. Seriously, they couldn’t make it black? Or gunmetal gray?

*Pew pew pew!*

*Pew pew pew!*

Wallis initially flew John Stears’ mocked-up Little Nellie model around Miyazaki on location in Japan, but the explosions required for the helicopter battle would defy Japanese law. Production was moved to the similar-looking Torremolinos in Spain.

After production wrapped and a cynical, Bond-weary Connery was pushed through the press junket, he casually strolled into an interview  – without his toupee – wearing a casual T-shirt with baggy trousers and sandals. The interviewer was shocked and asked: “Is this how James Bond dresses?” Connery responded:

I’m not James Bond. I’m Sean Connery… a man who likes to dress comfortably.

What’d He Wear?

More power to you, Sir Sean, but let’s see how James Bond does dress comfortably. Matt Spaiser featured a fine breakdown of this casual brown linen summer attire on his blog, The Suits of James Bond. Bond sports two different casual outfits while training in Japan, but this – consisting primarily of simple summer-friendly earth tones – is the superior of the two.

From head to toe, this would have been a Fleming-approved outfit. Fleming often called for Bond to wear “sleeveless” (aka short-sleeve) shirts and open-toed sandals in warm weather, and the color scheme is similar to the khaki shirt and dark brown jeans that Fleming outfits 007 in during a mission in Canada in “For Your Eyes Only”. Since this is Japan in July and not Canada in October, linen is the primary fabric for Bond’s clothing.

Bond and Aki engage in some day drinking before the real business of the afternoon is forced upon them.

Bond and Aki engage in some day drinking before the real business of the afternoon is forced upon them.

Bond wears a light tan linen sport shirt that is designed for casual comfort in the sun with its full cut and straight, untucked hem. The short sleeves are cuffed above the elbow, and the five white buttons fasten down a plain front; Connery only wears the lower three buttons done. The shirt has a square patch pocket on the left breast and short vents along the hem – one on the right and one on the left.

YOLT4-CL1-Shirt2

Bond’s brown linen flat front trousers also have a comfortably full cut, as few sartorial traditions are more refreshing on a warm day than feeling a breeze blowing through a pair of full-fitting linen slacks. Based on the frogmouth front pockets and plain-hemmed bottoms, they’re likely styled the same as his later gray trousers with side-tab “Daks top” waist adjusters and no rear pockets.

Q shows off Little Nellie while 007 shows off Little Sean.

Q shows off Little Nellie while 007 shows off Little Sean.

When standing near Q and the other MI6 cronies all outfitted in bush khaki, Bond subconsciously looks like part of their team in his arguably cooler – both figuratively cooler and literally cooler – variation of the earth tones.

His feet definitely stay cooler in a pair of light brown leather sandals with open toes. The sandals have one sabot strap near the front, another strap over the arch, and a heel strap to keep his foot snugly in place. The lack of an intertoe thong means he could wear the sandals with socks if he wanted to… but he thankfully chooses not to do so.

Bond’s sandals appear to have solid, non-adjustable straps but most commonly made sandals these days have a buckle on each strap to allow a snugger fit. The closest examples I’ve been able to find online are the Pikolinos Phuket and the unisex Birkenstock Milano, both available from Zappos. I’m not crazy about open-toed sandals myself (there was an incident with a toenail in 2004…), but their cooling benefits can’t be denied.

This is one of the simpler outfits in the Bond franchise. Comfortable, minimal, and no frills – not even a watch. Later, Bond again sports linen for his training with Tanaka, but his choice of a dressier pink linen shirt with long “turnback cuff” sleeves tucked into gray wool trousers – still wearing the same brown sandals, mind you – is too much of an awkward mishmash to exude the same elegantly casual charm of this outfit.

What to Imbibe

Tiger Tanaka happens across Bond and Aki as they’re working their way through a bottle of Suntory Old Whisky, the legendary Japanese whisky that many filmgoers remember from Bill Murray’s advertisements in Lost in Translation.

Cheers!

Cheers!

YOLT4-LS-Akadama.jpgJapan was a late-comer to the whiskey game, and it’s no surprise that the nation began distilling in 1870 just after the start of the Meiji period that marked a rapid cultural and economic renaissance in Japanese history. Suntory’s story began nearly three decades later when Torii Shinjiro opened a store in Osaka to sell imported wines. Shinjiro was constantly innovating; the store became the Kotobukiya company in 1921, and Shinjiro built the country’s first malt whisky distillery – Yamazaki Distillery – two years later.

Shinjiro even introduced the first nude advertising poster in Japan when he rolled out a poster in 1922 featuring model Matsushima Emiko wearing only a meek smile as she holds a glass of Akadama port wine.

Yamazaki produced the first single malt whisky made in Japan, Whisky Shirofuda (Suntory White Label), and it went on the market in 1929.

More information about Suntory’s history in the James Bond series can be found at James Bond Lifestyle.

How to Get the Look

007 wins again with another summer ensemble that will keep you cooler – again, both literally and figuratively – than those other rubes in their t-shirts and shorts.

YOLT4-crop1

  • Tan linen short-sleeve sport shirt with camp collar, plain front, breast pocket, and straight hem with side vents
  • Brown linen flat front trousers with button-tab “Daks top” side waist adjusters, frogmouth front pockets, no rear pockets, and plain-hemmed bottoms
  • Light brown leather sandals with gabot strap, instep strap, and heel strap

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the movie. It may not be my favorite Bond, but it’s still classic Bond.

The Quote

Little Nelly got a hot reception. Four big shots made improper advances toward her, but she defended her honor with great success.


The Rum Diary – Kemp’s Striped Linen Shirt and Jeans

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Johnny Depp as Paul Kemp in The Rum Diary (2011).

Johnny Depp as Paul Kemp in The Rum Diary (2011).

Vitals

Johnny Depp as Paul Kemp, expatriate American journalist and borderline alcoholic

St. Thomas, Summer 1960

Film: The Rum Diary
Release Date: October 28, 2011
Director: Bruce Robinson
Costume Designer: Colleen Atwood

Background

All the balls that Paul Kemp was juggling at this point have begun to fall. His grasp on his job, his shady dealings with PR whiz Sanderson, and his flirtation with Sanderson’s girlfriend. The bottom falls out when Kemp and photographer pal head to Carnival at Saint Thomas in the Virgin Islands after visiting island property for Sanderson’s budding real estate scam.

Bruce Robinson’s script perfectly nails the feeling of the scene as Chenault leads Kemp by the hand to Sanderson’s yacht:

Like walking the plank in reverse, they invade a small drinks party.

Other than the glamorous Chenault, none of the new visitors fit in with Sanderson’s cosmopolitan set.

Zimburger takes Kemp and Sala to see the island property, then they head to St. Thomas for Carnival. Kemp finds Chenault, and they wind up on Sanderson’s boat. Sanderson berates Kemp for involving Sala in the deal. At night, they go to a club, and a drunk Chenault dances with local men to provoke Sanderson, with whom she has been fighting. The black owners of the bar beat up Sanderson and throw Kemp out of the club. Chenault is left behind at the bar, but where she ends up is not known. The next day, Chenault is gone, and Sanderson tells Kemp that their business arrangement is over.

Unfortunately for our cheeky protagonist, venturing to Carnival at Saint Thomas is exactly the rum-soaked revelry he should have expected.

What’d He Wear?

Kemp goes out to party in a colorfully striped linen long-sleeve shirt and jeans. Based on his look (and his behavior), he isn’t dressed for fashion so much as he is for comfortably getting drunk.

Kemp’s linen shirt is a nice enough garment, but the way he wears it is intentionally sloppy. The button-down collar is left unfastened – as are the rounded cuffs – and he wears it untucked, allowing the long hem in the front and back to blow around freely.

THE RUM DIARY

Kemp checks out the local scene in St. Thomas.

The shirt’s stripes alternate between light green, tan, baby blue, navy blue, sky blue, and a light blue-gray. The boldness of the alternating stripes is somewhat muted by the linen; from a distance, the navy stripes are most prominently seen with the remaining stripes having a “shadow” effect across the rest of the shirt.

Kemp’s shirt fastens down a front placket with seven mother-of-pearl buttons, with the top few gradually unbuttoning over the course of the party to continue his devil-may-care approach to dress. The back of the shirt has a center box pleat under a hang loop. The center box pleat gives the shirt more fullness; linen is comfortable in hot weather, and a full shirt keeps the fabric from clinging and unfulfilling its purpose.

THE RUM DIARY

Linen is always a smart choice for warm weather wear, although Kemp counters that bit of sartorial shrewdness by coupling it with a pair of jeans. Jeans are not typically recommended for warm summer days in the Caribbean, but Kemp’s life tends to be an unpredictable one and he likely realizes the value of a durable pair of pants for a day-long boozing bonanza.

Kemp also wisely wears a pair of slightly distressed 100% cotton jeans with a loose fit throughout the legs, allowing a breezy airflow without the restrictions of non-cotton synthetic fibers that trap sweat and heat against the skin. The denim wash is a rich medium blue, and the baggy fit continues through the legs down to the full break bottoms.

THE RUM DIARY

Kemp’s footwear of choice is a pair of tan suede 2-eyelet desert boots that don’t receive much screen time in this sequence under the full break of his heavy jeans. He wears them with several casual outfits throughout The Rum Diary, often with cream cotton socks.

THE RUM DIARY

No party should end this way.

Kemp’s watch is a plain military-styled watch with a round steel case and black dial on a light brown strap. Hunter S. Thompson had indeed served in the U.S. Air Force shortly before he traveled to Puerto Rico and penned The Rum Diary, so it’s very possible that Kemp’s watch is an Elgin, Hamilton, or other brand approved for service.

THE RUM DIARY

Kemp’s sunglasses are much less military-inspired and much more space age, appropriate for 1960. The vintage Sol Amor wraparound sunglasses have a futuristic gold frame curving around the two large brown bubble lenses in the front.

THE RUM DIARY

Go Big or Go Home

Kemp knows how to party, kicking off his night by reading Coleridge’s The Rime of the Ancient Mariner… for some reason.

THE RUM DIARY

“It was written in 1797 by a junkie called Coleridge,” explains Kemp.

Of course, Kemp is able to shift easily into party mode and takes off the albatross from around his neck to chug some beer and – of course – rum.

THE RUM DIARY

Tengo ron y cerveza!

The party music is anachronistic for 1960, but Hound Dog Taylor & the HouseRockers provide a perfect backbeat for the raucous bacchanal with “Kitchen Sink Boogie” and “Let’s Get Funky”.

Despite the anachronism, the music is exactly what Robinson wanted, as he wrote in the script:

Once again I refer to HOUND DOG TAYLOR. His is the kind of music I want. A real friendly face with a Strat and a grin, hits a slug from his on/stage bottle. "You alright?" "You alright?" Sure they're alright. Two hundred faces alright.
Adrenaline out of a raw guitar. Caribbean turned into black rock and roll. Walls of black muscle put eyes on the little white girls. CHENAULT and her GIRLFRIEND are riding cloud 9.
"Kitchen Sink Boogie," or something similar. Rock like it's coming out of the floor.

How to Get the Look

Kemp dresses for a party, but he wisely doesn’t dress to impress given the kind of party.

Amber Heard and Johnny Depp as Chenault and Paul Kemp.

Amber Heard and Johnny Depp as Chenault and Paul Kemp.

  • Blue/green/tan multicolor striped linen long-sleeve shirt with button-down collar, front placket, breast pocket, and button cuffs
  • Blue denim jeans with baggy fit and full break
  • Tan suede 2-eyelet desert boots
  • Cream cotton socks
  • Sol Amor vintage wraparound sunglasses with gold front frame across brown “space age” bubble lenses
  • Steel military-style wristwatch with round case, black dial, and light brown strap

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Read the book first, and the movie will make a lot more sense! Of course, Hunter S. Thompson fans are already well familiar with the gonzo mindset.

The Quote

I don’t know how to write like me.


Denzel Washington in Inside Man

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Denzel Washington as Det. Keith Frazier in Inside Man (2005).

Denzel Washington as Det. Keith Frazier in Inside Man (2006).

Vitals

Denzel Washington as Keith Frazier, NYPD detective

New York City, August 2005

Film: Inside Man
Release Date: March 24, 2006
Director: Spike Lee
Costume Designer: Donna Berwick

Background

Thirty years after Al Pacino electrified audiences in Dog Day Afternoon, Spike Lee released Inside Man, another gripping film about a mid-day New York City bank robbery involving hostages, double-crosses, and character-driven comic moments biting into the suspense.

While Dog Day Afternoon focuses primarily on the criminals, Inside Man shifts focus to the other side of the law as the charismatic and somewhat cocky Detective Keith Frazier (Denzel Washington) is assigned to handle the robbery. His adversary is far more cunning than the emotional Sonny of Dog Day Afternoon, and Frazier is just the guy to match his wits. As Frazier himself bemoans:

Who ever heard of a bank robbers escaping on a plane with fifty hostages? You’ve seen Dog Day Afternoon! You’re stalling! Why? I don’t know.

Washington was originally given the choice between playing the guileful bank robber Dalton Russell or the ambitious Detective Frazier. He opted for the second, citing the role as “Brutus goes to Brooklyn” and basing it off of his earlier Broadway performance in Julius Caesar.

What’d He Wear?

Detective Frazier dresses sharply for work, showing up at the scene in a lightweight wool tan pinstripe suit that nicely contrasts the colder dark blue uniforms and suits around him.

InsideDW-CL1-Jkt1

Frazier stands out from the rest of the cops with his seasonally-appropriate wardrobe.

Frazier’s suit jacket is single-breasted with a 3-button front that is nicely spread out over Washington’s long torso. The jacket has a welted breast pocket, jetted hip pockets, 4-button cuffs, and a ventless back. The shoulders are straight with roped sleeveheads. He wears his gold NYPD police detective pin, with its blue enamel painted surface, on the left notch lapel.

INSIDE MAN

A pensive Denzel.

Although it first appears to be a simple pinstripe pattern, a closer look reveals an alternating double stripe with the light tan stripe providing the most contrast and a second peach stripe blending in to provide a warmer overall appearance.

INSIDE MAN

Another day so another shirt and tie. This production still offers the best view of the contrasting suit stripes, though.

The suit has a pair of matching low rise trousers with single reverse pleats, offering more comfort for a man that ends up wearing the same pants for almost 24 hours. Frazier’s suit trousers have belt loops, on-seam side pockets, and two jetted rear pockets that each close with a single button. The plain-hemmed bottoms have a full break.

INSIDE MAN

Frazier’s shirt on the day of the bank robbery is light ecru cotton. It has a large, wide spread collar and a front placket. He fastens the double cuffs with gold links.

INSIDE MAN

Frazier’s silk tie perfectly matches his gold-and-blue NYPD lapel pin. The tie is a series of bold right-down-to-left stripes alternating between double-ribbed navy blue and a wider mustard gold. The gold stripe is broken up by two narrow sets of triple stripes in yellow, citrus gold, and yellow again.

INSIDE MAN

The next day, when Frazier and his partner go to investigate the vault, Frazier wears the same suit with a different shirt and tie. The shirt is white, but his tie is cream and orange striped – also bold but now in the opposite direction – with black stripes across the bottom half of each cream portion.

INSIDE MAN

The second shirt-and-tie combo is better seen during Frazier’s meeting with Madeleine White, but – alas – he wears a solid tan suit for that meeting.

Frazier sticks to the earth tones with his dark burgundy leather belt that closes with a steel buckle. He attaches his black nylon belt holster – one of the few non-earth tone aspects of his outfit – to the right side of the belt for a right-hand draw.

INSIDE MAN

Mitchell: Hey Keith, let me see your shoe.
Frazier: What?
Mitchell: Lemme see your shoe.
Frazier: Why?
Mitchell: ‘Cause I have never seen anyone put their foot that far up a guy’s ass.

A sharp-dressed guy like Frazier would be expected to follow the matching belt/shoes rule, and he does so with aplomb. He sports a pair of dark burgundy cordovan leather perforated cap toe bluchers with thick black soles. The brief glimpse of his socks under the trousers’ full break shows dark – either black or dark brown – dress socks.

INSIDE MAN

The full break of Frazier’s trousers is just long enough to avoid hitting the soles on the back of his shoes.

Maitre d': May I have your hat, please?
Frazier: No, you cannot! Get your own.

Frazier tops off his look (literally) with a short-brimmed trilby in light straw. The hat’s slim cream-edged ribbon is taupe with a black, cream, and rust brown Glen plaid overcheck.

INSIDE MAN

On his right pinky, Frazier wears a gold pinky ring resembling a miniature NYPD detective’s shield, complete with the blue enamel face. He also wears a gold curb link bracelet on his right wrist.

INSIDE MAN

Gold is clearly Frazier’s color of choice from his clothing to his accessories, including his Gevril Chelsea watch with its 18 karat yellow gold 40mm case and gold link bracelet. The watch has a round white dial and fastens to his left wrist via deployment clasp.

How to Get the Look

Detective Frazier doesn’t let the unpredictable nature of his work get in the way of his looking sharp on a long summer day in the city.
InsideDW-crop

  • Tan double-pinstripe lightweight wool suit, consisting of:
    • Single-breasted jacket with notch lapels, 3-button front, welted breast pocket, jetted hip pockets, 4-button cuffs, and ventless back
      • Blue enamel-painted gold NYPD pin on left lapel
    • Single reverse-pleated low rise trousers with belt loops, on-seam side pockets, jetted button-through rear pockets, and plain-hemmed bottoms
  • Light ecru cotton dress shirt with large spread collar, front placket, and double/French cuffs
  • Gold and navy blue boldly-striped silk necktie
  • Gold cluster cuff links
  • Dark burgundy cordovan leather perforated cap-toe bluchers
  • Black dress socks
  • Dark burgundy leather belt with squared steel single-claw buckle
  • Black nylon RHD belt holster for mid-size Glock pistol
  • Light straw short-brimmed trilby with multi-color Glen Plaid ribbon
  • Gevril Chelsea yellow gold wristwatch with white dial and gold link deployment-clasp bracelet, worn on left wrist
  • Gold curb link bracelet, worn on right wrist
  • Blue enamel-painted gold NYPD detective’s shield pinky ring, worn on right hand

The Gun

True to life, all NYPD officers seen in Inside Man – including Detective Frazier – carry Glock 19 semi-automatic pistols. Surprisingly for a crime drama centered around a bank robbery, Frazier never gets to draw his, and the only action it sees is when he removes the magazine and puts it away at the end.

 

INSIDE MAN

Frazier says goodnight to his Glock.

The Glock 19 is, in fact, one of three 9×19 mm service pistols currently offered to NYPD officers; the other two are the SIG-Sauer P226 and Smith & Wesson 5946, both with double-action only (DAO) triggers and all modified to a 12 lb. (“NY-2″) trigger pull. The NYPD transitioned to semi-automatic pistols from revolvers in 1994, but any officers carrying revolvers from before then are still permitted to use their revolver as a duty weapon.

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the movie.

The Quote

Sorry to interrupt you, Mister Mayor, but there’s an old American saying: When there’s blood on the streets, somebody’s gotta go to jail.



Indiana Jones’ White Dinner Jacket

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Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984).

Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984).

Vitals

Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones, adventurer and archaeology professor

Shanghai, Summer 1935

Film: Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
Release Date: May 23, 1984
Director: Steven Spielberg
Costume Designer: Anthony Powell

Background

For the first Indiana Jones post on BAMF Style, one might expect to see the iconic leather jacket, fedora, and bullwhip costume. However, Indy’s first chronological appearance in the original trilogy is at the outset of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom when Indy dons his finest duds to meet with Shanghai crime boss Lao Che at the hopping Club Obi Wan.

What’d He Wear?

English costume designer Anthony Powell set himself apart as a master of 1930s film wardrobes for a few decades, dressing everyone from Indiana Jones to the oft-doomed vacationers in several lavish Agatha Christie adaptations.

One of Powell’s earlier designs, a white dinner jacket worn by Nicholas Clay as Patrick Redfern in Evil Under the Sun, was also featured on BAMF Style last summer. Two years after Evil Under the Sun, Powell returned to the drawing board to create a white dinner jacket for another ’30s gentleman in a warm climate.

And what a gentleman he is!

And what a gentleman he is!

Like Patrick Redfern, Indy would’ve been taking a cue from the tropical resorts where gents were now sporting white or off-white dinner jackets in warmer climates. As Black Tie Guide says: “White dinner jackets premiered alongside the mess jacket in resorts like Palm Beach and Cannes, albeit with much less fanfare. Constructed of cotton drill, linen, or silk they were originally worn with either black or white trousers of tropical weight wool.”

Based on the texture and thickness, Indy’s cream dinner jacket appears to be tropical wool or possibly a cotton and wool blend. It is single-breasted with a single covered button in the front. The wide, silk-faced peak lapels extend sharply toward the padded shoulders and roped sleeveheads. (More about the silk facings later.)

Indy turns on the charm for the crime bosses.

Indy turns on the charm for the crime bosses.

Dr. Jones embellishes his look with not one but two added touches. He folds a white linen handkerchief into the welted breast pocket and pins a large red carnation to the left lapel.

Indy’s dinner jacket also has jetted hip pockets, a ventless back, and 4-button cuffs in mother-of-pearl. Questionable silk facings aside, it would’ve been a very stylish jacket for 1935 before men’s formalwear briefly entered a more double-breasted phase as seen on the Redfern jacket and in Casablanca.

Indy hops around Club Obi Wan.

Indy hops around Club Obi Wan.

Black Tie Guide also notes the rising popularity of formal waistcoats in the 1930s: ‘Waistcoats have become a high style item,’ observed Apparel Arts in 1933. ‘No more of the thick ill-fitting affairs but today a suave and sleek arrangement.'” Indy’s nod to this “suave and sleek arrangement” is a black silk single-breasted waistcoat with a low V-shaped front opening. Although backless designs were entering the men’s fashion realm, Indy’s vest appears to be the more traditional full-back version.

Indy’s waistcoat has a 4-button front – each button covered in black satin – with a notched bottom. The jacket covers the vest most of the time, but it appears to have wide shawl lapels and no pockets.

INDY

I’ve never seen Harrison Ford look so distressed!

Indy properly wears a pair of black formal trousers made of tropical-weight wool with a single satin stripe down each side to the plain-hemmed bottoms.

Indy’s shirt is a more traditional white plain front bib that is now more associated with white tie. Two onyx studs are visible between the detachable wing collar and the bottom of the waistcoat opening. The shirt’s single cuffs are fastened by a pair of unique bronze cuff links depicting the Eye of Horus, the Egyptian god of creation. According to Indy Props, which recreated its own pair in gold-plated or bronze-plated metal: “This symbol represents royal authority as well as mathematical signs used by the Egyptians. This design of cufflinks is also fitting for the time period, with the Egyptian art-deco renaissance of the 1920s and 30s.” Indy’s cuff links provide a unique, adventurous touch to an otherwise traditional outfit.

INDY

#YesAllWillies

Another non-traditional – and more disappointing – aspect of the outfit is Indy’s black satin bow tie. While there’s absolutely nothing wrong with a black satin bow tie with a white dinner jacket, Indy wears a pre-tied model rather than a self-tie model. This would be less grievous if it wasn’t for Indy’s wing collar which fails to obscure the hook closure on the left side of the tie knot.

Indy’s shoes are a correct pair of black patent leather longwing oxfords, best seen when he scrambles all over the floor of Club Obi Wan in search of an antidote. We briefly see his socks, also black and likely cotton.

INDY

♫ Happy feet… ♫

The oft-referenced Black Tie Guide directly mentions this outfit in a blog post from last summer, commenting that “[the silk facing] might be legitimate for the 1980s production timeline it certainly wasn’t for the 1930s narrative. Of the dozens of Depression-era white DJ references I have on file from leading menswear periodicals, none of them suggest anything but self facings.” Author Peter Marshall also notes that “the black waistcoat would have been equally unorthodox back in the day.” Given Mr. Marshall’s extensive research into the history of formalwear, I would accept his word and say that Indy’s formal attire is more an ’80s interpretation of the ’30s than an actual reflection of the period’s fashions.

What to Imbibe

Indy and his criminal companions do better than James Bond’s ten-year-old champagne by sipping from a bottle of Moët & Chandon 1915… which would’ve been a full twenty years old by the time of the film’s setting. Modern Moët drinkers may be used to seeing the traditional “Brut Imperial” label, but here we see a “Dry Imperial” label.

Pop!

*Pop!*

Of course, you’ll want to avoid any poisoned coupes of Moët. Even if you have the antidote, you never know what you’ll have to do to get your hands on it.

How to Get the Look

While not a perfect translation of ’30s formalwear, Indy’s off-white dinner jacket provides a cool template for making an impression on your weekend getaway. (In Dr. Jones’ case, that would be a literal getaway.)

IndyTux-crop

  • Cream wool-blend single-breasted dinner jacket with wide peak lapels, single covered-button front, welted breast pocket, jetted hip pockets, 4-button mother-of-pearl cuffs, and ventless back
  • Black satin silk single-breasted 4-button waistcoat with wide shawl lapels and notched bottom
  • Black tropical wool formal trousers with satin side stripes and plain-hemmed bottoms
  • White formal dress shirt with detachable wing collar, plain front bib, two onyx shirt studs, and single cuffs
  • Black satin silk bow tie
  • Bronze deco-style “Eye of Horus” cuff links
  • Black patent leather longwing oxfords
  • Black cotton socks

Indy accessorizes with a large red lapel carnation and a folded white silk pocket square.

The Gun

Indiana: Where’s my gun? WHERE’S MY GUN?
Willie: I burned by fingers and I cracked a nail!

Although it is only briefly spotted as Indy fights back against Lao Che’s gangsters, the gun used in Temple of Doom has been determined to be a Colt Official Police revolver with a 4″ barrel, chambered in .38 Special. The fact that Indy loses his Official Police in the first scene may explain why he has a different weapon, a Smith & Wesson, by the time of the next adventure (Raiders of the Lost Ark).

Good thing Colt didn't pay for this placement.

Good thing Colt didn’t pay for this placement.

Due to its quick and blurred screen time, many assumed that this standard-looking American revolver was the same as the Smith & Wesson Hand Ejector used in Raiders of the Lost Ark. IndyGear.com, however, has been able to definitely prove that it was an Official Police. IndyGear.com researched the three handguns rented for the film’s production, a Colt Official Police .38 with a 4″ barrel, a Smith & Wesson Model 10 .38 with a 5″ barrel and lanyard ring, and a Webley Green revolver that was meant to be used as Indy’s “hero” gun (explaining the larger Webley-sized holster he wears later).

Interestingly, this car chase through Shanghai is the only time that Indy uses a handgun throughout the film.

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the movie, or the whole series.

The Quote

I suggest you give me what you owe me… or anything goes!


Californication – Lew Ashby’s Light Gray Date Suit

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Callum Keith Rennie as Lew Ashby on Californication (Episode 2.09: "La Ronde", 2008).

Callum Keith Rennie as Lew Ashby on Californication (Episode 2.09: “La Ronde”).

Vitals

Callum Keith Rennie as Lew Ashby, maverick record producer and rock legend

Los Angeles, Spring 2008

Series: Californication
Episodes: “La Ronde” (Episode 2.09)
Air Date: November 23, 2008
Director: Adam Bernstein
Costume Designer: Peggy A. Schnitzer

Background

Californication‘s early seasons are often considered to be its best, and the show’s ability to avoid a sophomore slump should give major credit to Callum Keith Rennie’s appearance as Lew Ashby, the enigmatic, charismatic, and hedonistic record producer that shelters Hank for most of the season.

As a show that reveres both rock and literature, Californication wisely spun its second season around a Gatsby-esque plot with writer Hank Moody reasonably placed in the central Nick Carraway role as the cleverly-named Ashby became his Gatsby. Ashby built his rock empire to impress Janie Jones, who now lives with a brutish husband in a Hollywood McMansion and still reminisces – albeit, more bitterly – about her days with Lew when he was just a poor aspiring rocker with a broken-down Mustang.

In a deviation from Fitzgerald’s masterpiece plot, Ashby briefly falls for Hank’s flame – Karen – and steals her away for an impromptu kidnapping date to the Hollywood Bowl. Karen is charmed, for sure, but she’s too reasonable to fall for someone that is even more debauched than Hank.

What’d He Wear?

Suits don’t get much love in the Californication world. The show’s t-shirt-loving protagonist, Hank Moody, refers to his “one and only suit” that is worn only for weddings, funerals, and court appearances. However, Lew Ashby knows when the right duds are needed to impress a lady.

For his Hollywood Bowl date with Karen, Lew spruces himself up in a light gray suit constructed from a lightweight semi-solid wool in a pick weave.

LEW

Lew doesn’t get a mild height difference get in the way of a potential romance.

The single-breasted jacket has a two-button front and 4-button cuffs. The breast pocket is welted and the flapped hip pockets sit straight back on Lew’s waist. The wide peak lapels flare out to the roped sleeveheads. The shoulders are unpadded.

LEW

The back of Lew’s jacket has long double rear vents. His matching trousers are likely flat front with a low rise below his natural waist. They probably have side pockets, although the jetted rear pockets – which close with a button – are best seen.

LEW

Lew wears a black leather belt through the trousers’ belt loops. Apropos the outfit’s steely tones, his belt has a silver-toned buckle. The bottoms of the trousers are plain-hemmed with a full break that covers his black leather boots. Assuming they are the same boots he wears through most of the show, they have a strap across the vamp that closes with a small steel buckle.

LEW

A real gentleman always opens the door for his date and also pulls out her briefcase if he kidnapped her on her way home from work.

Perhaps knowing that Karen digs guys who wear black shirts, Lew opts for a black long-sleeve dress shirt with black buttons down the plain, placket-less front. It has a large collar, which he leaves open with the first few buttons undone.

LEW

Better luck next time, Lew.

Unlike many of the BAMFs featured on this blog, Lew Ashby isn’t afraid to bedazzle himself with plentiful accessories on a daily basis. Hank wears one silver ring, but Lew ups the ante with two – one on the third finger of each hand.

Like Hank, he also wears a simple black corded leather bracelet that appears to never be removed. Unlike Hank, he wears it on his right wrist.

Not from this episode, but a fine representation of Lew's many accessories.

Not from this episode, but a fine representation of Lew’s many accessories.

Since this is the most that Lew ever covers up his sleeves, it’s difficult to determine if he’s wearing his other accessories… but it’s likely that he is. He doubles down on his left wrist, sporting both a bracelet of silver spherical studs and a stainless watch on a black rubber strap. On a corded necklace his neck, he wears a steel pendant with what appears to be an owl’s face etched into it.

Go Big or Go Home

The Hollywood Bowl is an impressive enough date spot alone, but Ashby’s musical connections allow him to rent the place out for a private concert for just he and Karen to see Lili Haydn.

Well played, Lew.

Well played, Lew.

I admittedly had never heard of Lili Haydn before the show, but Karen is duly impressed, as was I after I learned more about her. She began playing the violin at the age of eight, shortly after launching her acting career as the young daughter of Columbo. Not long after her appearance on Californication, she sustained neurological damage after being exposed to a pesticide which left her unable to write lyrics. She still, however, manages to write music and continues to compose film scores and the music for her latest EP, Lilliland, which was released last September.

I’m proud to say I’ve been to the Hollywood Bowl myself, but I’m ashamed to say that I was only eight years old; as the guest of a large family outing to the Bowl, I was unable to truly enjoyed it and spent most of the time being upset that I was split away from my parents. Spoiled brat, I was.

How to Get the Look

CaliLew209-crop

Callum Keith Rennie and Natascha McElhone as Lew and Karen, respectively.

Lew shows Hank that date attire doesn’t always have to be a black shirt and jeans.

  • Light gray semi-solid pick lightweight wool suit, consisting of:
    • Single-breasted jacket with wide peak lapels, 2-button front, welted breast pocket, straight flapped hip pockets, 4-button cuffs, and long double rear vents
    • Flat front low rise trousers with belt loops, side pockets, jetted button-through rear pockets, and plain-hemmed bottoms
  • Black long-sleeve dress shirt with large collar, plain front, and button cuffs
  • Black leather belt with squared steel single-claw buckle
  • Black leather buckle-strap boots
  • Tarnished steel ring, worn on right ring finger
  • Spiral steel ring, worn on left ring finger
  • Black corded leather bracelet, worn on right wrist
  • Steel spherical studded bracelet, worn on left wrist
  • Stainless wristwatch with white dial on black rubber strap, worn on left wrist
  • Steel “owl face” pendant on corded necklace

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Check out the second season.

The Quote

Life is just too fucking boring not to try.

Footnotes

For any of you who may have remembered from last year, today is my birthday – I’m now 26. Woo hoo!


DiCaprio in Gatsby’s Iconic White Suit

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Leonardo DiCaprio as Jay Gatsby in The Great Gatsby (2013).

Leonardo DiCaprio as Jay Gatsby in The Great Gatsby (2013).

Vitals

Leonardo DiCaprio as Jay Gatsby, eagerly romantic millionaire and bootlegger

Long Island, NY, Summer 1922

Film: The Great Gatsby
Release Date: May 10, 2013
Director: Baz Luhrmann
Costume Designer: Catherine Martin

Background

Last Tuesday, BAMF Style reflected on Californication‘s tribute to The Great Gatsby with its second season character of Lew Ashby; now, let’s focus on a more literal adaptation when Baz Luhrmann directed his lavish big-screen version a few years ago.

The turning point in the story is when the two old flames Jay Gatsby and Daisy Buchanan are finally reunited in Nick’s humble cottage. Gatsby isn’t dressed for such modest surroundings, wearing – as F. Scott Fitzgerald describes:

…Gatsby, in a white flannel suit, silver shirt, and gold-colored tie, hurried in.

This decidedly loud outfit would certainly make an impression on the woman who last saw you five years ago wearing a drab army uniform. As a romantic member of the nouveau riche, Gatsby doesn’t realize that millionaires don’t need to dress like millionaires every day, as he proves with the pink linen three-piece suit he wears for the film’s climactic scene.

What’d He Wear?

Gatsby’s iconic white suit is actually an off-white shade of ivory. Appropriately for summer, it is made from a comfortable lightweight linen blend. As we later discover, it is actually a three-piece suit but he opts for only the jacket and trousers worn with a contrasting waistcoat when reuniting with Daisy.

GATSBY

Gatsby oversees the day’s flower delivery.

The suit’s single-breasted jacket has a three-button front that rises midway up the torso. He tends to keep the top two buttons fastened while standing, always adopting the pose of a learned gentleman but still looking too highbrow to be natural. The jacket also has peak lapels with straight gorges and stitched edges. There is a buttonhole through the left lapel that Gatsby surprisingly wears devoid of any actual daisies.

GATSBY

The jacket’s shoulders are padded with roped sleeveheads that end with 4-button cuffs that match the white buttons on the jacket front. A long single rear vent ends at DiCaprio’s waist and is clearly reinforced on the left side to flap over the right.

GATSBY

Gatsby’s hip pockets are slanted with flaps like the traditional country hacking jacket. The welted breast pocket also slants slightly inward with a deep space for the pocket square, as seen when he comes in from the rain. Indeed, this “iceberg” effect (if you’ll excuse the Leo pun) shows us just how deep the tobacco brown paisley silk handkerchief is stuffed down the pocket.

GATSBY

All wet.

The suit’s flat front trousers have the era’s characteristic long rise that totally hides the waistband under the waistcoat; thus, all we know about the trousers’ closure is that it has a straight front fly. It’s likely that Gatsby wears his trousers with suspenders as he does with his pink suit.

GATSBY

Is that your hand in your pocket or are you just happy to see me?

When aiming for his “affected gentleman” pose, Gatsby often places his hand in the slanted left front pocket of the trousers, crossing the straight long right leg of the trousers over the left and showing off his footwear under the short break of the plain-hemmed bottoms.

GATSBY

Although the suit was manufactured with a matching waistcoat, Gatsby opts for a more casual contrasting vest in a rich tobacco brown linen with a subtle herringbone pattern. It is definitely single-breasted with about five or six brown horn buttons between the high-fastening top and the notched bottom.

GATSBY

The mannered Gatsby learned to unbutton his jacket when he sits.

As Gatsby rarely wears the jacket totally unbuttoned, it’s difficult to ascertain more detail about the vests.

SPOILER ALERT! During Gatsby’s funeral, he wears the exact same outfit but with the suit’s matching vest. Like the contrasting brown waistcoat, it is single-breasted with no lapels.

R.I.P. Gatsby :(

R.I.P. Gatsby :(

Interestingly, Gatsby wears the same shirt and tie with the white suit for his own funeral as he does for the meeting with Daisy. Perhaps this was the filmmakers’ way of signifying that Gatsby’s fate was sealed as soon as he and Daisy reunited, setting them both on a literal collision course that resulted in Myrtle’s fatal car accident and Gatsby’s death from Wilson’s murder-suicide. Perhaps.

The “silver shirt” described by Fitzgerald is reflected here with a blue-gray woven silk shirt. The large collar has long points and a moderate spread, further narrowed under the tie knot by a steel barbell-style collar pin. The shirt also has a front placket and single cuffs. His cuffs are fastened by a silver set of links that appear to match the “sunburst” pattern on his ring.

GATSBY

Hand to hand.

Gatsby’s tie is a more interesting variation of the simple “gold tie” mentioned in Fitzgerald’s text. DiCaprio wears a tie in bright orange silk with sets of thin double red stripes crossing from left-down-to-right.

GATSBY

A pensive Gatsby.

Gatsby’s suits all have short breaks, meaning that his footwear receive considerably more screen time than many other suits on film. Here, Gatsby sports a pair of two-tone spectator shoes with light tan toe caps, heel caps, and 4-eyelet tabs with gray single-piece vamps. A pair of plain light tan dress socks nicely connect the two-tone spectator shoes and white suit trousers.

GATSBY

Once again, we meet Gatsby’s mysterious and supposedly custom-made stainless wristwatch. Initially supposed by some to be an anachronistic Jaeger-LeCoultre Reverso, a Watches In Movies post indicated that the watch seen on DiCaprio’s left wrist was made just for him, but more details about the rectangular white-dialed watch remain a mystery at this time.

GATSBY

There’s a clock right next to him, but a dramatic flick of the wrist is a much more showy way of checking the time.

The 1920s saw a major wristwatch boom as returning soldiers from the front brought this more convenient timekeeping method to civilian life, with wristwatches outnumbering the venerable pocket watch 50-to-1 by 1930.

Brooks Brothers’ “Gatsby Collection”

As part of their “Gatsby Collection” tie-in to promote their collaboration with the production (and the original author), Brooks Brothers developed their “Fitzgerald Fit” to combine 1920s fashion fads to 2010s fits. Wisely, the company developed its own variations of the iconic white and pink suits for sale.

GATSBY

Unfortunately for potential buyers, the only item from this outfit still remaining for sale is the trouser.

Although many details differ from the suit seem in the movie (lapel width, number of jacket buttons, vent style, trouser height, etc.), the “Gatsby Collection” suit is a fine step in the direction of promoting better seasonal dress among the younger generations. The commercially-available version of the suit was made from “linen woven at Ireland’s Baird McNutt mill” with a “traditional herringbone pattern throughout”.

Redford vs. DiCaprio

As with the post comparing Robert Redford’s pink suit and DiCaprio’s pink suit, it’s worth comparing the white suits each gentleman wore for this scene.The costume designers for each film took a little more wiggle room with the pink suits, but we see more consistency here as both films strove to incorporate Fitzgerald’s “white flannel suit, silver shirt, and gold-colored tie” direction with then-contemporary styles.

The Suit – Redford and DiCaprio both wear solid white-toned linen suits with single-breasted jackets and flapped hip pockets. However, Redford’s wide notch lapels and pocket flaps are decidedly more a reflection of 1974 than 1922. DiCaprio’s suit looks trim with its high-buttoning front, slim peak lapels, and sporty silhouette. As the decade continued, the large fit, double-breasted waistcoat, and pleated trousers seen on Redford would become more popular, but DiCaprio’s slim suit and contrast vest show a more original take on the look. Advantage: DiCaprio, by a nose.

The Shirt – Both Redford and DiCaprio wear metallic blue silk shirts with a silver sheen, long collar, front placket, and cuff links. They both even wear silver collar pins! To avoid nitpicking, let’s call this a draw.

The Tie – Redford’s Gatsby wears a solid gold tie that manages to scream 1970s with both its duller tone and thickness. DiCaprio, on the other hand (or neck), wears a much brighter orange tie with an interesting stripe pattern and a slim width that one would’ve seen on a gentleman during this transitional period between the WWI era and the Roaring Twenties. Advantage: DiCaprio, even though it isn’t a literal interpretation of “gold”.

The Shoes – Redford wears plain white shoes with cream socks. DiCaprio wears two-tone spectator shoes with tan socks. Advantage: DiCaprio, for both uniqueness and period-correct style.

The Accessories – Each man keeps it lighter than usual here, with only pocket squares and cuff links showing a difference between Gatsby’s usual watch and ring. Redford’s Gatsby wears a metallic blue pocket square that evokes his shirt and a gold pocket watch in his vest. DiCaprio’s pocket square instead draws out his contrasting vest, and the custom-made wristwatch reflects both his military status and nouveau riche youth. Advantage: DiCaprio.

Which look do you prefer?

Which look do you prefer?

Unlike the neck-and-neck battle of the pink suits, DiCaprio’s interpretation of Gatsby’s white suit is the clear winner here, but Redford still deserves some solid points.

Go Big or Go Home

I typically hate umbrellas, but Gatsby really knows how to use his with style.

GATSBY

Luckily for Nick, Daisy, and the legions of umbrella-carrying butlers, the rain stopped in mid-afternoon.

How to Get the Look

Meeting up with an ex-girlfriend for an amiable coffee date? Blow her socks off with this ensemble. She might expect you to have a sprawling Long Island mansion though, so make sure you put your questionably-gained money where your mouth is when presenting yourself.

GG13White-crop

  • White ivory linen blend Brooks Brothers suit, consisting of:
    • Single-breasted jacket with peak lapels, 3-button front, welted breast pocket, slanted flapped hip pockets, 4-button cuffs, and long single rear vent
    • Flat front high-rise trousers with slanted front pockets and plain-hemmed bottoms
  • Tobacco brown linen herringbone single-breasted vest with notched bottom
  • Blue-gray “sheen” silk shirt with long collar, front placket, and single cuffs
  • Orange silk necktie with sets of double red L-down-R stripes
  • Steel barbell-style collar pin
  • Silver “sunburst” cuff links
  • Light tan & gray two-tone leather 4-eyelet spectator shoes
  • Light tan dress socks
  • Silver pinky ring with dark “starbust” face, worn on right pinky
  • Stainless wristwatch with a rectangular white face and stainless deployable-clasp bracelet, worn on left wrist
  • Tobacco brown paisley silk pocket square

If you think contrasting waistcoats are “too English” (they’re not, and that’s also not a bad thing) or you want to shake up this look for your funeral, you can opt for a matching suit vest instead.

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the movie. You should read F. Scott Fitzgerald’s original book, even if you already read it in high school.

I’m also a solid advocate of Maureen Corrigan’s book, So We Read On: How The Great Gatsby Came to Be and Why It Endures, which analyzes the book and its legacy. It should be required reading for scholars of The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald, literature, or the 1920s.


Buck Barrow’s Leather Flight Jacket

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Gene Hackman as Buck Barrow in Bonnie and Clyde (1967).

Gene Hackman as Buck Barrow in Bonnie and Clyde (1967).

Vitals

Gene Hackman as “Buck” Barrow, Depression-era ex-convict looking to go straight

Joplin, Missouri, Spring 1933

Film: Bonnie & Clyde
Release Date: August 13, 1967
Director: Arthur Penn
Costume Designer: Theadora Van Runkle

Background

BAMF Style’s been focusing a lot on law-abiding BAMFs lately, and – while their behavior may be admirable – it’s always welcome to shift back to characters with murkier legal histories. 1967’s Bonnie and Clyde is stylish in many regards, including the rugged outlaw style sported by Clyde’s older brother Buck, played charmingly by Gene Hackman in his first major on-screen role.

The real Marvin Barrow (aka “Buck”) was born in March 1903, making him six years older than his more infamous little brother Clyde. (Similarly, Gene Hackman is seven years older than Warren Beatty.) Buck had a reputation with local West Texas police as a tough scoundrel who never shied away from crime, although he didn’t display the psychopathic traits for which Clyde would be so feared by lawmen across the South and Midwest. Never more than a petty thief in the eyes of Dallas cops, Buck’s most notable early crime was just before Christmas 1926 when he and a 17-year-old Clyde were arrested with a truck full of stolen turkeys which they intended to sell for the holidays. Buck characteristically took the rap for he and Clyde and spent a week in jail.

Over the next three years, Buck continued making ends meet with the occasional odd job and the more occasional car theft. In November 1929, he met and instantly fell in love with Blanche Caldwell, a lovely preacher’s daughter from Oklahoma. Two weeks later, he was in police custody after a failed robbery in Denton where Clyde again left his older brother to pay the piper while the wily younger Barrow brother scrambled off to relative safety. As Buck began his sentence in the Texas State Prison, Clyde met a vulnerable young waitress from Rowena, and criminal history was made.

The 5'5" Buck would have likely been very intimidated by the actor who played him, as Gene Hackman is 6'2".

The 5’5″ Buck would have likely been very intimidated by the actor who played him, as Gene Hackman is 6’2″.

March 1930 was an eventful month for both the Barrow brothers and the lawmen who had been hounding them. During his budding romance with Bonnie Parker the previous month, Clyde was embarrassingly arrested at her mother’s home and sent to Waco to face charges. On March 5, Clyde was given two 7-year terms in the Texas State Prison in Huntsville. The only potential upside of this for the young criminal was that he would get to see his older brother Buck. However, Buck took the opportunity on March 8 to escape from the Huntsville pen by hopping into a guard’s car and making for Dallas. Three days later, Clyde himself would pull off an escape with the help of a reluctant Bonnie and an old .32 revolver.

Buck reunited with Blanche, and she became his third wife on July 3, 1931. Although later portrayed as an uptight shrew who couldn’t abide her husband’s criminal past, she actually would later admit to author John Neal Phillips that he had been very forthright with her about his career and that she had even participated in a few robberies with him. The criminal life doesn’t suit her, however, and she joins Buck’s mother Cumie in a campaign to convince him to return to prison and fulfill his four-year sentence to allow them to live a more peaceful life.

After spending Christmas with his family, Buck shocked the Huntsville warden when he drove up to the main prison facility of the Texas State Penitentiary and announced that he was back to complete his sentence after 21 months on the run. His only request was a safe assignment inside “the Walls” of Huntsville rather than a prison farm like Eastham, especially since his legs still bothered him after being wounded in the 1929 Denton robbery. Impressed prison officials gave Buck the placement he suggests and don’t add any additional time for the escape to his sentence. Cumie and Blanche again teamed up to petition the governor’s office for a parole on Buck’s behalf.

Despite Clyde’s growing notoriety at the time, Governor “Ma” Ferguson grants Buck a full pardon on March 23, 1933. He makes a brief stop home in West Dallas before heading to Denison to pick up Blanche and begin their lives together as free, law-abiding citizens.

The “happily ever after” story would have (and should have) ended there, but – unfortunately – Clyde returned to West Dallas the next day and learned from his family that Buck was paroled. Clyde jams his Ford’s pedal to the floor to make it to Wilmer by midnight to visit Buck and Blanche at her family’s farmhouse. After four hours of Blanche pleading for her husband not to team up with his murderous brother, Buck agrees to a “family reunion” in Joplin, Missouri, a town considered to be a safe haven for the era’s criminals. By dawn, Clyde, Bonnie, and their young “apprentice” W.D. Jones have left after making plans to meet up in Joplin. Blanche is allowed to bring her little dog Snow Ball. Ostensibly, Buck agrees to the trip on the condition that he will only be there to talk Clyde into following his example of giving himself up. Whether or not he knew subconsciously what would happen is unknown.

Four months after Buck’s pardon, he is bleeding from a grievous head wound in an abandoned amusement park in Dexter, Iowa, surrounded by his now-blinded wife and their three criminal confederates. The gang is bloodied and nearly beaten, and it is decided that Buck should be returned to West Dallas as quickly as possible so that he would at least be granted the comfort of dying at home.

Buck Barrow died on July 29, 1934, exactly 81 years ago yesterday.

Buck Barrow died on July 29, 1934, exactly 81 years ago yesterday.

On the morning of July 24, 1933, the gang is alerted to an approaching posse. Bonnie screams, and the entire gang – Blanche included – scrambles to grab weapons. The shooting commences with rapid fire from both the hidden lawmen and the exposed bandits. Blanche tries to shield Buck from any fire. Clyde determines that the only way he and Bonnie could be saved is to abandon his dying brother. Buck tries to convince Blanche to run on without him and makes a final stand against the posse, but he is shot five more times. Blanche cries out: “Stop, for god’s sake, stop! Don’t shoot anymore! You’ve already killed him!” Although he is mortally wounded, Buck would hang on for five more days before finally dying in a Dexter hospital.

What’d He Wear?

Hackman’s Buck reunites with Clyde in a comfortable traveling outfit that fits the character’s more practical, lighthearted nature. The primary garment of his early outfits is a distressed brown leather jacket that resembles the classic U.S. military A-2 flight jacket. The only notable difference between Buck’s jacket and the A-2 is the lack of epaulettes – or shoulder straps – on Buck’s coat. Given the natural distressed state of his leather, it’s both possible and likely that the version worn by Hackman in the film was made by a private contractor to meet personal military demand after the U.S. Army Air Force stopped officially issuing them in 1943.

Buck and Clyde happily greet each other. Blanche waits in the car... not quite as happy.

The Barrow boys reunite.

Following the U.S. Army Air Forces Class 13 Catalog describing the Jacket, Flying, Type A-2 with Spec No. 94-3040, Buck’s jacket can be described as “seal brown horsehide leather” with “knitted wristlets and waistband”. His jacket also has the shirt-style collar and flapped hip pockets characteristic of the A-2. These patch pockets – located on both the right and left side – close with a snap on a pointed flap. There are no handwarmer pockets as the A-2 was designed without them to maintain a man’s military posture without stuffing his hands into his pockets.

BCBuckA2-CL2-Jkt-Pockets

Buck’s jacket also has the leather storm flap over the front zipper; it’s worth noting that the A-2, which was adopted as standard issue on May 9, 1931, was one of the first pieces of clothing that was designed to use a zipper as its primary method of closure. The previous flying jacket, the Type A-1 adopted in 1927, used buttons on both the front and the pocket flaps.

Buck’s jacket has a tan lightweight cotton inner lining and, as its likely a civilian garment, lacks the military spec tag under the back collar. The stitched shoulder straps, which the military added when it developed the A-2, are also missing.

According to David Newman and Robert Benton's screenplay, "BUCK is a jovial, simple, big-hearted man. A little chubby, given to raucous jokes, knee-slapping and broad reactions.  He is, in many ways, the emotional opposite of his brother." Well-played, Hackman.

According to David Newman and Robert Benton’s screenplay, “Buck is a jovial, simple, big-hearted man. A little chubby, given to raucous jokes, knee-slapping and broad reactions. He is, in many ways, the emotional opposite of his brother.” Well-played, Hackman.

When he first meets up with Clyde, Bonnie, and C.W. at their motor cabin, Buck is sporting his jacket with an ivory shirt, patterned silk tie, and charcoal trousers. By the time they hit the road for Joplin (ostensibly the following day), he switches to a blue chambray shirt, striped tie, and tweed trousers. His belt and shoes remain the same.

Buck’s first shirt is light ivory poplin with a slim, moderately spread collar. It has a breast pocket, button cuffs, and a plain front with no placket. His tie is cream silk with a Deco motif consisting of small, interconnected maroon, gray, and gold diamonds. Both the pattern and the shape of the tie is very ’30s with its wide bottom. He ties it in a tight four-in-hand with a small knot that hangs just below the top collar button of his shirt.

BCBuckA2-CL3-ShirtTie1

His charcoal flannel trousers are flat front with a considerably low rise. The cuffed bottoms have narrow turn-ups with a slightly flared leg and a short break. Buck’s trousers all appear to be similarly styled with belt loops, on-seam side pockets, and no rear pockets.

For the drive to Joplin (and subsequent gunfight), Buck now wears a light blue chambray shirt. Other than the button cuffs (which he wears rolled-up for most of the scene), it is styled very differently from his last shirt with no breast pocket and white buttons down a front placket.

BCBuckA2-CL4-Shirt2

Buck’s second tie, which he quickly abandons after settling into the gang’s Joplin hideout, is dark green with sets of thin, lighter green stripes crossing from right-down-to-left.

...don't sell that cow.

…don’t sell that cow.

Buck’s brown tweed trousers in Joplin appear to belong to the matching three-piece suit he will later wear for the gang’s big bank robbery in north Texas. (A tweed three-piece suit wouldn’t be my attire of choice for an action-packed summer day in Texas, but we’ll get to that in a later post.) These trousers are similarly styled to the charcoal flannel ones.

A proud Texan, Buck wears a tan tooled leather belt that fastens in the front through a large curved steel “horseshoe”-shaped buckle, evoking the state’s rugged reputation. Buck wears a pair of brown calfskin leather oxfords with high black socks.

Buck and Clyde happily greet each other. Blanche waits in the car... not quite as happy.

Buck and Clyde happily greet each other. Blanche waits in the car… not quite as happy.

Buck’s only other accessory is a beige wool newsboy cap that he removes soon after reuniting with his little brother. The newsboy cap is differentiated from a standard flat cap by its eight-paneled crown and top center button.

Go Big or Go Home

Learn a good joke. Just don’t overuse it.

Hey, you wanna hear a story ’bout this boy? He owned a dairy farm, see. And his ol’ Ma, she was kinda sick, you know. And the doctor, he had called him come over, and said, uh, “Uhh listen, your Ma, she’s lyin’ there, she’s just so sick and she’s weakly, and uh, uh I want ya to try to persuade her to take a little brandy,” you see. Just to pick her spirits up, ya know. And “Ma’s a teetotaler,” he says. “She wouldn’t touch a drop.” “Well, I’ll tell ya whatcha do, uh,” – the doc – “I’ll tell ya whatcha do, you bring in a fresh quart of milk every day and you put some brandy in it, see. And see. You try that.” So he did. And he doctored it all up with the brandy, fresh milk, and he gave it to his Mom. And she drank a little bit of it, you know. So next day, he brought it in again and she drank a little more, you know. And so they went on that way for the third day and just a little more, and the fourth day, she was, you know, took a little bit more – and then finally, one week later, he gave her the milk and she just drank it down. Boy, she swallowed the whole, whole, whole thing, you know. And she called him over, and she said, “Son, whatever you do, don’t sell that cow!”

How to Get the Look

Buck’s casual attire is simple but unique, establishing him as a tough but playful “good ol’ boy” with its military and Western influences.

BCBuckA2-crop

  • Brown horsehide leather flight jacket with shirt-style collar, storm-flapped zip front, snap-flapped hip pockets, and knit waistband and cuffs
  • Light ivory dress shirt with slim spread collar, plain front, breast pocket, and button cuffs
  • Cream silk necktie with an interconnected maroon-gray-gold diamond Deco-style motif
  • Charcoal flannel flat front trousers with belt loops, on-seam side pockets, no rear pockets, and cuffed bottoms/turn-ups
  • Tan tooled leather belt with large curved steel “horseshoe” single-claw buckle
  • Brown calfskin leather oxfords
  • Black socks
  • Beige wool newsboy cap

To switch up the look, opt for a blue work shirt or brown tweed trousers. Just be careful… Buck’s luck changed when he did that.

The Gun

Buck isn’t looking for any trouble when he meets up with his brother. Nevertheless, trouble finds the Barrow boys in Joplin, and Buck reverts to his basic nature of defending his brother… and doing so with a gun. He picks up a classic coach gun, a double-barreled shotgun with exposed hammers and a sawn barrel, and gets to work.

While Buck is seen killing at least one policeman with his shotgun during the film’s version of the Joplin gun battle, it’s most likely that both officers killed in real life – Detective Harry L. McGinnis and Constable John Harryman – were shot by Clyde.

Buck's criminal side takes over when their vacation is interrupted by "the laws".

Buck’s criminal side takes over when their vacation is interrupted by “the laws”.

This evidently becomes Buck’s long arm of choice, as he later dramatically snaps the barrel into place when “questioning” Eugene Grizzard during the gang’s impromptu kidnapping. The variety of these shotguns made since the development of the boxlock action in 1875 makes it difficult to identify the exact manufacturer of Buck’s shotgun.

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the Ultimate Collector’s Edition. It’s a must-have for all Bonnie & Clyde fans with its booklets and hours of supplemental material. As of yesterday, it was only $6!

You’d also be well-advised to visit Frank Ballinger’s page, Bonnie & Clyde’s Texas Hideout, the ultimate web source for Barrow gang knowledge and artifacts. For an additional fascinating perspective to the Barrow gang’s saga, you should read Blanche’s book, My Life with Bonnie and Clyde, edited by Barrow historian John Neal Phillips.

The Quote

We gonna have ourselves a time, boy!


Limitless – Eddie’s Blue Tom Ford Suit

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Bradley Cooper as Eddie Morra in Limitless (2011).

Bradley Cooper as Eddie Morra in Limitless (2011).

Vitals

Bradley Cooper as Eddie Morra, performance-enhanced investment broker and former struggling author

New York City, Spring 2010

Film: Limitless
Release Date: March 18, 2011
Director: Neil Burger
Costume Designer: Jenny Gering

WARNING! Spoilers ahead!

Background

It’s been a long time since I watched a truly suspenseful and entertaining thriller that combined drama, action, romance, comedy, and – of course – thrills all into one efficient package. I worried that the genre had died somewhere between the greatness of NotoriousNorth by Northwest and Chinatown, leaving only a few mind-numbing attempts in its wake. Then, I saw Limitless.

Limitless kicks off with a timeless fight or flight scenario: will our obvious protagonist leap to his inevitable death or turn to face his angry, violent interlopers? It’s a dangerous decision that pulsates through the rest of this fast but smart ride of a movie. After learning about Eddie’s quick, unapproved-performance-enhancing-drug-assisted leap from ragged author to hotshot investor, we find him back where our ride started… standing back on that ledge. All of our basic questions have been answered with aplomb – Who is this guy? Where is he? Why are people banging on his door and leaving him with this sole option out? The only question remains – how will he get out of it?

What’d He Wear?

“As soon as he takes NZT, he’s an assassin. He’s stealth,” is how Bradley Cooper explained his desired look for Eddie Morra to costume designer Jenny Gering. Gering explains that his look “goes from night to day” after he starts taking the drug. Director Neil Burger adds that “everything kind of gets cleaner, sharper. Suddenly, he has a really good eye for style.”

Viewers of the film have no choice but to agree. Our first look at Eddie Morra finds him on that apartment building ledge, resplendent in a navy blue Tom Ford suit. It’s hard to look bad in a Tom Ford suit, and Cooper’s enthusiasm for the costume choices would have something to do with Eddie’s special brand of cool. “He starts to dress differently when he changes is really because it allows him to get where he wants,” explained Cooper, showing fine appreciation for the role of sartorial art in cinema. “And I love to wear suits, so that was actually fantastic.”

I'd be hearing Cream in my head during a moment like this.

I’d be hearing Cream in my head during a moment like this.

The dark navy Tom Ford suit in this scene is constructed from a lightweight wool and was custom-fit for Bradley Cooper. It appears to be the Regency model (or possibly a bespoke version based on the Regency) that Daniel Craig wore as James Bond in Quantum of Solace, which featured Craig’s arguably best-fitting suits of his 007 tenure to date.

LimitlessEMBlue-CL1-Jkt-2

The single-breasted jacket has large notch lapels that roll over the top button to the second of three, which is the only one he ever wears fastened. The pagoda shoulders sweep down to roped sleeveheads. Each sleeve ends with five functioning buttons. The outside of the jacket has a welted breast pocket and straight hip pockets with wide flaps. The ticket pocket above the right hip pocket also has a wide flap.

Eddie consults with his lawyer (left). A behind-the-scenes shot of Bradley Cooper and Robert De Niro (right).

Eddie consults with his lawyer (left). A behind-the-scenes shot of Bradley Cooper and Robert De Niro (right).

Cooper’s strong physique is emphasized with the suit’s fit. The jacket’s long double vents, flared skirt, and clean chest suppress the waist and show the audience that Eddie has physically transformed into a more athletic man after taking NZT.

In addition to the secret pockets stitched into the dark blue silk lining of his suit, this jacket has the standard inner pockets on each side of the chest. Below the inner left pocket, the familiar black “TOM FORD” label patch can be glimpsed as Eddie looks for his purloined stash.

Tom Ford's "cameo".

Tom Ford’s “cameo”.

Eddie’s matching flat front suit trousers have a medium-low rise on his waist. They are likely fitted since neither belt loops nor side adjusters are seen, although the Regency trousers sported by Daniel Craig in Quantum of Solace had adjusters with buckle straps. Eddie’s trousers have on-seam side pockets and double jetted rear pockets that close with a button. The bottoms are plain-hemmed.

As costume designer Gering noted in a featurette: “Most of his shirts have a blue-ish cast to them. Very crisp-looking. That helps contribute to the fact that he’s healthy and in shape…”

Eddie’s primary shirt with this suit is a pale blue Thomas Pink “Keaton Plain” Slim Fit shirt in cotton twill with diagonal ribbing. The shirt has mitred 2-button cuffs and a front placket with stitched edges and blue buttons.

Eddie puts his shirt through the ringer.

Eddie puts his shirt through the ringer.

Thomas Pink is a wise choice for Eddie, who never wears ties with his suits. Pink’s site describes: “Inspired by non-tie wearers, Thomas Pink has designed a shirt that sits perfectly under a jacket. A tie performs several functions, one of which is that it handily keeps the shirt collar in place, especially when worn under the weight of a jacket. Take away the tie and the collar will collapse. Enter the Independent shirt with a collar specifically engineered to be worn independent of a tie. More robust than traditional collars, the Independent shirt collar is shaped to support itself.”

Even after a rough day, Eddie keeps a good-looking collar thanks to his Pink shirt.

Even after a rough day, Eddie keeps a good-looking collar thanks to his Pink shirt.

Multiple sources, including Nate D. Sanders’ auction photos and The Take, have confirmed Eddie’s shirt to be the Keaton model, which is still available from Pink’s site for $180 as of August 2015. Sanders’ auction, which ended in April 2014, describes the shirt as: “blue and white diagonal stripe long-sleeved shirt buttons up the front. Pink brand shirt in a slim fit is a size 16 1/2.” The “diagonal stripe” is an effect from the diagonal ribbing.

See the diagonal ribbing? (Also check out the bloodied version of the screen-used shirt, photographed and auctioned by Nate D. Sanders.)

See the diagonal ribbing? (Also check out the bloodied version of the screen-used shirt, photographed and auctioned by Nate D. Sanders.)

In an earlier scene when he goes to Van Loon’s office flanked by his bodyguards and gives a presentation, he wears a different shirt consisting of thin blue and white vertical stripes. This shirt is similarly styled with its strong collar, front placket, and button cuffs, but it appears to have a breast pocket.

Bradley Cooper is buttoned into a striped Pink shirt on the set.

Bradley Cooper is buttoned into a striped Pink shirt on the set.

Eddie’s black leather cap toe shoes are best seen when he is standing on the ledge of his apartment, in control of his own potential demise. They are clearly oxfords (or balmorals) with 5-eyelet closed lacing, although the manufacturer has been tough to track down. I heard an unsubstantiated rumor that Cooper wore mostly Cole Haan shoes in Limitless, so I checked their site even though it’s been five years since the production. Cole Haan does produce a “Cambridge” cap oxford in soft black leather that would look fine in any gentleman’s closet if he’s okay to part with $258.

Eddie on the edge.

Eddie on the edge.

Eddie’s dark socks appear to be blue, appropriately continuing the leg line from his trousers into his black shoes.

Eddie actually wears two solid dark blue suits; the other is easily differentiated by the slimmer jacket lapels and the trouser belt loops. It is only briefly seen when he initially hires his bodyguards and when he meets the detective in a restaurant about the murder.

Go Big or Go Home

…especially if that home is at a classic place like The Link, Eddie’s luxury high rise in Hell’s Kitchen. The address is 310 West 52nd Street, if you’re looking. The Link was developed by Elad Properties and opened in 2005 with 215 condos throughout its 44-story structure. According to Streeteasy.com, the sales price for these condos can range anywhere between $1 million and more than $5 million… so start saving.

Don't worry, Eddie. If I'd spent a few million on a fortified apartment that a few Russian gangsters  can still break into, I'd probably run out of options also.

Don’t worry, Eddie. If I’d spent a few million on a fortified apartment that a few Russian gangsters can still break into, I’d probably run out of options also.

How to Get the Look

Eddie’s simple look shows us how variations of a single color can look smart. It also speaks volumes about the power of good clothing without the need for frills like cuff links, belts, eyewear, or even a tie. All Eddie needs is a suit, a shirt, and a pair of shoes to be the best-dressed guy in the room.*

LimitlessEMBlue-crop.jpg

  • Dark navy blue lightweight wool Tom Ford suit, consisting of:
    • Single-breasted jacket with notch lapels, 3-roll-2 button front, welted breast pocket, flapped hip pockets, ticket pocket, 5-button functioning “surgeon’s cuffs”, and long double rear vents
    • Flat front trousers with fitted waistband, on-seam side pockets, button-through jetted rear pockets, and plain-hemmed bottoms
  • Pale blue diagonally-ribbed cotton twill Thomas Pink “Keaton Plain” slim fit shirt with large “independent” collar, front placket, no rear darts, and mitred 2-button cuffs
  • Black leather 5-eyelet cap-toe oxford balmorals
  • Dark blue dress socks

*Although we can assume he has underwear and socks on as well. Still… does he really need them?

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the movie and check out Alan Glynn’s 2003 novel The Dark Fields, which served as the basis for Limitless and lent its title to the book Eddie publishes by the end. I haven’t yet read the book, but I purchased Limitless on a whim based on a suggestion from one of you fine commenters, and I’m certainly glad I did!

The Quote

For a guy with a four digit IQ, I must have missed something. And I hadn’t missed much. I’d come this close to having an impact on the world. And now the only thing I’d have an impact on was the sidewalk.


Sinatra’s Orange Sweaters in Ocean’s Eleven

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Frank Sinatra and Peter Lawford with female admirers in Ocean's Eleven (1960).

Frank Sinatra and Peter Lawford with admirers in Ocean’s Eleven (1960).

Vitals

Frank Sinatra as Danny Ocean, smooth-talking con man and casino heister

Beverly Hills to Las Vegas, December 1959

Film: Ocean’s Eleven
Release Date: August 10, 1960
Director: Lewis Milestone
Costume Designer: Howard Shoup

Background

Just because a man is legendary for his tux doesn’t mean he can’t rock a comfortable sweater for more casual activities. When it comes to the Chairman of the Board, there’s no argument.

What’d He Wear?

It may surprise many to know that Frank Sinatra loved the color orange.

Paul Galloway’s Chicago Tribune article, “Sinatra’s Way”, was published in November 1997, six months before the entertainer’s death. In it, he gives a style tip from Bill Zehme, the author of the excellent The Way You Wear Your Hat: Frank Sinatra and the Lost Art of Livin’:

You aren’t threatened by vivid colors. Sinatra loved to wear pink, lavender, lilac. And orange was his favorite.

Knowing that, it makes sense that he would have Danny Ocean enjoying some leisure time in a classic, cool outfit consisting of a white shirt, dark trousers, and an orange sweater.

The Peach Sweater

Sinatra makes his first on-screen appearance in Ocean’s Eleven wearing a luxurious peach-colored mohair sweater. The sweater is a long-sleeve pullover with a thick ribbed v-neck. The cuffs and waistband are also ribbed. Despite this particular sweater’s considerable bulk, the famously thin Sinatra still looks slim and trim as he waltzes into the room and settles comfortably into a chair.

Frank enjoys a shoulder rub from a lovely young woman who must have enjoyed touching such a soft sweater.

Frank enjoys a shoulder rub from a lovely young woman who hopefully enjoyed her mohair experience.

Mohair sweaters are very difficult to track down these days, especially for men. Scott’s Sweaters features a rotating assortment of vintage mohair sweaters for sale if you’re determined to evoke Sinatra’s on-screen brand of fuzzy luxury. Otherwise, you may need to seek out an angora blend or stick to cashmere, a comfortable but typically less fuzzy option.

Underneath the sweater, Frank wears a white poplin dress shirt. It’s likely one of the same shirts he wears with one of his suits later in the movie; based on the very long collar points, it’s probably the shirt he wears with his specked gray sportcoat or when he wears his black suit and tie to recruit Vince Massler into the heist. If so, it also has button cuffs that are hidden by the sweater’s ribbed cuffs.

We don’t see much of Danny Ocean’s charcoal gray trousers in this scene either, but it’s reasonable to assume that they’re styled like most of his others in Ocean’s Eleven with single reverse pleats and straight side pockets. They are clearly worn with a belt that slightly bulges under the sweater when Danny enters the room, but it remains concealed throughout the scene. The bottoms are plain-hemmed with no cuffs.

Peter Lawford dresses much less modestly for his massage.

Peter Lawford dresses much less modestly for his massage.

When Danny kicks back, we see his dark burgundy cordovan leather tassel loafers to keep things sophisticated but informal. The rest of the outfit – particularly the bright peach sweater and the long-collared shirt – may be a bit loud for some people’s taste, but the burgundy loafers are a classy touch. Sinatra wears black dress socks.

The Salmon Red Sweater

The “eleven” take a break from heist-planning in Vegas for a bowling expedition where Danny lays down the ground rules: all work and no play until the job is done. Since it’s a casual outing, he sticks to his same principles of informal attire with a more subdued look to indicate that he’s in “serious work” mode rather than “getting massaged by random playmates in a hotel” mode.

Danny’s ensemble also needs to be comfortable enough to allow him the full range of motion when tossing the ball down the alley. For this, he wears a muted reddish salmon v-neck pullover sweater.

Frank takes a thoughtful drag of his Camel.

Frank takes a thoughtful drag of his Camel.

The material of Sinatra’s sweater in this scene is harder to ascertain. While there’s a chance it may be cashmere, it’s likely either acrylic or an acrylic/wool blend. The ribbing on the v-neck, waistband, and cuffs is slimmer than on the peach sweater, and Frank actually rolls back each sleeve to form a single cuff just above his wrist.

It doesn't get much cooler than Frank and Dean.

It doesn’t get much cooler than Frank and Dean.

This is the sole appearance of the light ecru shirt that Frank wears under his sweater. All we see is the spread collar with its long points, though not as dramatically long as the previous shirt. The color is best determined when contrasting Frank’s shirt against the plain white sport shirt that Dean Martin wears in the same scene.

The fellas go bowling.

The fellas go bowling.

From the waist down, Frank’s attire is the same as it was with the peach sweater. He wears the same charcoal pleated pants with the belt hidden under the sweater, although a fashion plate like Sinatra would most likely match a burgundy belt to his burgundy tassel loafers.

The only accessory present is a gold ring he wears on his left pinky with a flat black square setting. It doesn’t appear to be the gold signet ring with his family crest that he used to wear on his right hand, as quoted in Ilene Rosenzweig’s New York Times style article from 2000:

Frank Sinatra wore a signet ring with a family crest on his right hand, dressing up an otherwise inelegant mitt. ”My knuckles are like broken bananas,” he once said. He refused the gift of an ID bracelet from his family, saying he wore only the ring, and besides, ”I know who I am.”

He certainly did.

How to Get the Look

Frank’s orange sweaters were worn with classic elements to create an image of personality-infused sophistication. If you hate orange, don’t wear it. If you still want to wear it, don’t be a copycat… just do it your way.
O11FSsweater-crop

  • Orange soft v-neck pullover sweater with ribbed waistband and cuffs
  • White or ecru poplin dress shirt with long-pointed spread collar and button cuffs
  • Charcoal gray single reverse-pleated trousers with belt loops, straight side pockets, and plain-hemmed bottoms
  • Dark burgundy leather belt
  • Dark burgundy shell cordovan leather tassel loafers
  • Black dress socks
  • Gold pinky ring with black square setting

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the movie. You’d also be well-advised to track down a copy of Bill Zehme’s The Way You Wear Your Hat, the definitive Sinatra style bible that spurred Paul Galloway to pen his Chicago Tribune article quoted in this post. I was lucky enough to receive my own copy of Zehme’s book from Teeritz, an excellent blogger well-known to BAMF Style’s commenters.

Footnotes

The Ilene Rosenzweig article was evidently written in response to The Sopranos‘ impact on culture as soon as it hit HBO viewers’ screens in 1999. The full text of the article, which was published in January 2000, can be found here. A highlight is her opening quote from Tony Sirico, best known now as The Sopranos‘ aging soldier “Paulie Walnuts”:

“I’ve been wearing it for 30 years,” Tony Sirico said. “It’s part of my life.” Mr. Sirico was discussing his pinkie ring, the same one he wears when playing Paulie Walnuts on The Sopranos, the HBO mob opera that started its second season last week.

“They say Mafia wear pinkie rings, but men of style wear pinkie rings,” Mr. Sirico said. “So long as they’re not gaudy and the man has a nice hand — not too feminine a hand.” Mr. Sirico, who favors what he called a “sexy” black onyx look, said he was unaware that pinkie rings had gone out of style.


Michael Caine as Alfie – Blue Mohair Suit

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Michael Caine as Alfie Elkins in Alfie (1966).

Michael Caine as Alfie Elkins in Alfie (1966).

Vitals

Michael Caine as Alfie Elkins, charming part-time car service driver and full-time cad

London, Fall 1965

Film: Alfie
Release Date: March 24, 1966
Director: Lewis Gilbert
Wardrobe Supervisor: Jean Fairlie
Tailor: Douglas Hayward

Background

Poor Michael Caine is forced to learn the hard way that there’s more to life than shagging “birds” and getting sloshed in Alfie.

After nearly ten years as an actor, Caine was finally receiving his due when he got the part of Alfie Elkins. He’d had two great roles over the previous two years in Zulu and The Ipcress File, and Alfie was his time to shine. After his roommate Terence Stamp (who had played Alfie on Broadway) passed on the role, Caine was approached and swept the screen with what became his breakthrough role as the philandering playboy. Caine’s “controversial” Cockney accent solidified his authentic portrayal of a common man, and it led to his first Academy Award Best Actor nomination and his second consecutive BAFTA nomination.

What’d He Wear?

As an unrepentant ladies’ man (at least for most of the film), Alfie Elkins needs to dress to impress. This navy blue mohair blend suit is one of the most commonly seen outfits he sports on screen. Tailored by Douglas Hayward, the suit keeps Alfie looking modern and trim among the “swinging ’60s” London set with a slim fit and slim features from the jacket’s lapels and pockets to the tie and trouser legs. Alfie himself praises the suit when undressing for a medical exam:

This suit don’t weigh nothing. It’s a new Terylene and mohair. You don’t feel as though you got nothing on at all!

Of course, he may be trying to subconsciously elicit images of nudity in the nurse’s mind, but he’s absolutely right about mohair wearing cool due to its moisture wicking properties. By contrast, the luxurious fabric also insulates well during winter to keep its wearer at a desired temperature. While Alfie’s suit indeed shines under certain light, it doesn’t have the luster of pure mohair; Alfie’s description of “Terylene and mohair” (Terylene is just a brand name of polyester) is probably spot on.

Alfie shows off his finest Douglas Hayward-tailored duds.

Alfie shows off his finest Douglas Hayward-tailored duds.

Alfie’s suit is a fine example of how a suit can be tailored for a slim fit without looking tight and pulling at the wrong places. As Caine shows when he undresses for his exam, he is in average shape, but his suits make him look more trim thanks to Hayward’s expert hand. Jumping ahead to Skyfall in 2012, the very athletic Daniel Craig was placed in a series of ultra-slim-fitting suits in an effort to evoke the classic look of ’60s Bond, but he often looked as though he was about to burst a seam or a button.

Alfie66Blue-CL2-Jkt-1

Alfie finds himself near a children’s playground… hardly his comfort zone.

The single-breasted jacket has slim notch lapels – with a buttonhole on the left lapel – that roll over the top button to the center of the three buttons. The shoulders are padded with roped sleeveheads and each sleeve ends with a 4-button functioning “surgeon’s cuff”.

Alfie’s jacket has a breast pocket with a slim welt and hip pockets that slant gently backwards with narrow flaps. The back has a single vent.

Alfie reacts to some news in his flat.

Alfie reacts to some news in his flat.

The trousers rise considerably low for the era with narrow belt loops around the waist, through which he wears a narrow black leather belt. The extended front tab closes with a hook over the straight fly. The front pockets are slanted, and the rear pockets are jetted. Hayward keeps his fit consistent with a tapered leg down to the plain-hemmed bottoms that end with a short break.

Out of context, this was a pretty hilarious screengrab.

Out of context, this is a pretty hilarious screengrab.

A fashionable fellow like Alfie knows to match his shoes to his belt, and his black leather ankle boots are no exception. His dark dress socks – probably black or possibly navy blue – are often seen due to the trousers’ short break.

Alfie wears a white cotton poplin shirt with a long button-down collar. The decision for a very British character like Alfie to wear a button-down collar is surprising given its heavily American roots, although it was in England that John E. Brooks developed what was initially called the “polo collar” due to its appearance on polo players’ uniforms.

Although I don't think Alfie has playing polo on his mind.

Although I don’t think Alfie has playing polo on his mind.

Alfie’s shirt has squared single-button cuffs, a plain front, and rear side darts. As we see when he untucks the shirt, the hem is curved toward the front and back. (Alfie wears no undershirt, although untucking the shirt does reveal his white underwear briefs!)

Alfie66Blue-CL3-Shirt2

Alfie’s tie is also dark blue, and it nicely pairs with the cool hue of the navy blue suit. However, the tie is a shade lighter than the suit color; when wearing similarly-colored suits and ties, many men prefer to wear a darker tie than their suit. The slim knit tie is knotted with a small four-in-hand and has a flat bottom just above the trouser waistband.

In his ideal world, Alfie's tie wouldn't spent much time in place. Nor would the rest of his clothing.

In his ideal world, Alfie’s tie wouldn’t spent much time in place. Nor would the rest of his clothing.

Earlier in the film, when Alfie is picking up this suit from the dry cleaner he’s shagging, he wears a sky blue shirt with a slim spread collar and a multi-colored striped tie. This is his preferred shirt and tie with the gray pick suit he wore into the dry cleaner’s; he later wears the gray suit with this shirt-and-tie combo during the pub brawl that leads to his breakup with Annie.

"There was this manageress of a dry cleaners. And I was getting a suit cleaned in the bargain. Well... you can't turn something like that down."

“There was this manageress of a dry cleaners. And I was getting a suit cleaned in the bargain. Well… you can’t turn something like that down.”

I’m sure a more experienced eye would be able to identify Alfie’s stainless wristwatch, but the visible details are a simple black dial and a steel bracelet with a deployment clasp. If I had to guess, I’d say it was an Omega Seamaster Automatic like this one based on the rice-grain bracelet.

Alfie keeps all his accessories on and around his left hand.

Alfie keeps all his accessories on and around his left hand.

Alfie completes his look with a gold pinky ring on his left hand, set with a brown oval stone.

Evidently a fan of the fabric, Michael Caine would go on to sport another Hayward-tailored blue mohair suit in Get Carter five years later.

Go Big or Go Home

Alfie’s behavior leaves very little to be desired, and I think it’s fair to say that’s the point of the story. He’s a cheeky cad who refers to women as “birds”, abandons the girlfriend he knocked up, and engineered his married mistress’s abortion. He gets his comeuppance in the form of total disillusionment, although I’m sure some of the jilted ladies along the way wouldn’t have minded something a little more extreme.

How to Get the Look

Another relatively simple look where the true value is in Douglas Hayward’s expert tailoring for the times. He created a look that was perfect for a hip womanizer in swinging London that still resonates today thanks to his timeless craftsmanship.

Alfie66Blue-crop

  • Navy blue mohair blend suit, tailored by Douglas Hayward, consisting of:
    • Single-breasted jacket with slim notch lapels, 3-roll-2 button front, welted breast pocket, rear-slanted flapped hip pockets, 4-button functioning cuffs, and single rear vent
    • Flat front tapered-leg trousers with slim belt loops, on-seam side pockets, jetted rear pockets, and plain-hemmed bottoms
  • White cotton poplin shirt with long button-down collar, plain front, and squared button cuffs
  • Dark blue slim knit necktie with flat bottom
  • Black narrow leather belt with small gold metal single-claw buckle
  • Black leather ankle boots
  • Black dress socks
  • Stainless wristwatch with a black dial on steel deployable-clasp bracelet
  • Gold pinky ring with a brown oval setting

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the movie.

The Quote

I was wearing a navy blue lightweight suit, in a material called Tonik, made by Dormeuil, and I didn’t want it spoiling. I don’t care whether a bird uses Max Factor matte film or Outdoor Girl from Woolworth’s, if she starts purring up against your lapel, it won’t look the better for it.



Nucky Thompson’s Golf Attire

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Steve Buscemi as "Nucky" Thompson on Boardwalk Empire (Episode 2.05: "Gimcrack & Bunkum").

Steve Buscemi as “Nucky” Thompson on Boardwalk Empire (Episode 2.05: “Gimcrack & Bunkum”).

Vitals

Steve Buscemi as Enoch “Nucky” Thompson, crooked city politician and influential mob bootlegger

Atlantic City, Memorial Day 1921

Series: Boardwalk Empire
Episode: “Gimcrack & Bunkum” (Episode 2.05)
Air Date: October 23, 2011
Director: Tim Van Patten
Costume Designer: John A. Dunn

Background

As summer starts winding to a close, make sure you schedule some time this weekend to hit the links with your pals.

In Boardwalk Empire‘s second season, Nucky and political pals Harry Daugherty and Jess Smith blow off some steam after a Memorial Day ceremony by getting out onto the green. Things are tense for Nucky as his old protégé Jimmy Darmody is vying for power in the city, his Attorney General ally is more concerned with his weight than Nucky’s legal situation, and the unreliable Jess Smith is trying to use Nucky for a shady partnership. And that’s all just before they leave the clubhouse.

Nucky Thompson: Do you actually enjoy golfing?
Harry Daugherty: I enjoy being a man with the time to play it.

Maybe golf isn’t so relaxing after all.

What’d He Wear?

Although he doesn’t stick within the boundaries of traditional golf attire – which includes the very antiquated knickers – Nucky still dresses for the links like a stylish, respectable gentleman of the decade would and still incorporates his usual colorful flourish. As usual, none of his garments are a solid color or pattern – even his socks!

When we meet Nucky and his political comrades in the golf club’s locker room, he is buttoning up a Glen plaid cotton sleeveless cardigan (go ahead, call it a sweater vest). The pattern consists of a series of large-scaled brown and tan Glen checks. All edges – along the neck line, around the shoulder holes, and on the two lower pockets – are brown trim. The pattern stops mid-shoulder and the entire back is the same brown as the trim. It fastens with five brown plastic buttons down the front to the notched bottom.

NUCKY

Nucky’s sweater vest – rather than a sleeved sweater – is a wise choice for Memorial Day, allowing his arms a greater range of movement and keeping him cooler as the Atlantic City weather gets warmer.

Ralph Lauren produced a very similar sweater, described as a blend of 61% cotton, 24% cashmere, 10% silk, and 5% linen. It’s still available on Amazon for $125.80 (as of July 31, 2015), and looks exactly like the vest worn by Nucky, right down to the brown trim and plaid detail throughout. There are always a few examples available on eBay as well (including the auction where I found the following photos of the same garment.)

NUCKY

Thanks to Ralph Lauren, you too can dress like Nucky on the green!

The only major noticeable differences are that Nucky’s buttons are solid brown plastic and his vest’s Glen check is larger scaled. Otherwise, I fully endorse this Ralph Lauren sleeveless cardigan for your Nucky Thompson-style golf outings.

Nucky wears one of his favorite shirts, a light blue cotton dress shirt with a fine white windowpane. It has white buttons down a plain front and white contrasting French cuffs that he fastens with round silver cluster links. The cuff gauntlets also close with a single white button over each wrist. (For another example of this shirt in action, check out Nucky’s red windowpane suit three episodes later in “Two Boats and a Lifeguard”.)

NUCKY

Nucky offers one of his oft-seen “quit fucking around” glares.

With the shirt, he wears one of the custom-designed white “keyhole cutout” collars that were designed by John Dunn and his team for Nucky’s shirts in the early seasons. The collar is similar to the “Tyfold” collar developed by Cluett, Peabody, & Co. in 1903, and it is held in place with a gold bar under the tie knot. In this case, that tie is a series of muted brown and navy diagonal stripes separated by a fine tan shadow stripe. Nucky’s tie stripes run from his right down to the left.

Nucky’s trousers are actually part of a light brown wool three-piece suit that he wears occasionally throughout the second season, though not in this particular episode. The suit’s pattern consists of a subtle brown triple-striped windowpane check. The trousers themselves are flat front with an adjustable rear strap and a fishmouth in the back, intended to be worn with suspenders or braces, which Nucky likely has on under his vest. The side pockets are slightly slanted and the jetted rear pockets close through a single button. The trouser bottoms are cuffed with standard turn-ups.

NUCKY

Nucky wears a pair of two-tone spectator shoes in brown and cream leather. Since cleats were not yet common on golf shoes, Nucky’s 5-eyelet oxfords are likely just a standard pair of shoes without any rubber nubs on the sole. In addition to the laces, the brown parts of the shoe are the caps, counters, throat, and tongue. The quarters are cream.

His light brown socks rise up his calves with solid bands around the top. The rest of the socks have a darker brown square motif that resembles a classic Native American pattern.

NUCKY

Although we see Nucky raise his trousers to the top of his socks, it’s just to tie his shoes. His pants are undoubtedly regular suit trousers rather than golf knickers.

Nucky literally tops off his look with a straw flat cap in a tan basket weave. The open weave of the straw would be very cooling for an active morning on the golf course.

Don't even think about getting between Nucky Thompson and his golf cap!

Don’t even think about getting between Nucky Thompson and his golf cap!

To the best of my knowledge, the shot of him putting it on his head is the only time the cap features on the show.

How to Get the Look

It’s hard to imagine someone in 2015 getting so dressed up for a sport where courses are now allowing players in t-shirts and shorts to play, but it’s also nice to imagine a throwback to a more gentlemanly era. Sure, the deals made on the links may have been just as crooked as they are today, but at least the gents tried to look classy while doing so.

  • Brown & tan Glen plaid sleeveless cotton cardigan sweater with 5-button front, notched bottom, and welted hip pockets
  • Light brown (with brown triple-stripe windowpane check) flat front suit trousers with slanted side pockets, button-through jetted rear pockets, fishmouth back with adjustable strap, and cuffed bottoms
  • Light blue (with white windowpane) cotton dress shirt with detachable white “keyhole” cutout collar and white double/French cuffs
  • Dark brown and navy blue R-down-L striped necktie with tan shadow stripes
  • Gold collar bar
  • Silver cluster cuff links
  • Brown & cream two-tone leather 5-eyelet spectator oxfords
  • Light brown (with brown square motif) socks
  • Tan straw basket-woven flat cap

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the second season, or just get the whole series!

The Quote

The world doesn’t owe you anything. I don’t care who you are.

Footnotes

Having Christopher McDonald as Harry Daugherty tell Nucky that “I enjoy being a man with the time to play [golf]” could possibly be a fun nod to McDonald’s role as “Shooter” McGavin in Happy Gilmore.tumblr_llg81rYTI61qdasbeo1_500


The Sundance Kid’s Brown Corded Jacket

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Robert Redford as The Sundance Kid in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969).

Robert Redford as The Sundance Kid in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969).

Vitals

Robert Redford as Harry Longbaugh, aka “The Sundance Kid”, laconic and sharp-shooting American outlaw

Colorado, Fall 1898

Film: Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
Release Date: October 24, 1969
Director: George Roy Hill
Costume Designer: Edith Head

Background

Last year, we celebrated Robert Redford’s 78th birthday (and Throwback Tuesday, which I’ve decided can be a thing) by breaking down the Sundance Kid’s traveling suit when he and Butch Cassidy pack up and head to Bolivia. This year, for Bob’s 79th, we’ll look at his main outfit leading up to that – a badass assortment of Western wear that epitomize American outlaw style at the turn of the century.

What’d He Wear?

Although the film’s audience would be hard-pressed to call either Butch or Sundance a true villain despite their criminal vocations, Sundance is certainly the darker-demeanored of the two, reflected by his attire. In Bolivia, he wears a black suit and black hat. While still conducting his banditry in the U.S., he wears all black save for a brown corduroy jacket. By default, he becomes the film’s personification of the “black-hatted outlaw” trope although his easy charm differentiates him from more villianous contemporaries like Lee Van Cleef in The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.

The one major non-black part of his American banditry outfit is the brown wide-waled corduroy jacket. The jacket looks as well-traveled as Sundance himself, providing him comfortable and surprisingly fashionable outerwear that allows a wide range of motion for a man whose job includes jumping on and off of moving trains.

SUNDANCE

Even a taciturn bandit like Sundance has to laugh sometimes.

Though it’s a casual jacket, Sundance’s corduroy coat is cut like a suit coat with the only major difference being his jacket’s shirt-style collar, faced in black leather. It has five buttons down the front and plain cuffs. A special Western touch is the yoke that stretches horizontally across the upper back and slants down the chest from the upper portion of the sleeves. It’s simpler than the traditional pointed yoke, fitting Sundance’s understated style and sense of humor.

Sundance’s jacket also has straight flapped hip pockets and a long single rear vent.

SUNDANCE

There’s no denying that the Sundance Kid is good at what he does.

Butch would also wear a corduroy jacket when the two pick up their career in South America, but Butch’s garment is a lighter brown example of a more traditional sport coat with notch lapels.

SUNDANCE

Paul Newman, Redford, and Katharine Ross on set.

The rest of Sundance’s attire is all black. He wears a black cotton long-sleeve work shirt with black buttons down the front placket. The two chest patch pockets have mitred lower corners, and the cuffs close on a single button. The contrast between Sundance’s shirt and much darker pants indicates that the shirt may just be a very dark shade of charcoal, but let’s call it black for the sake of practicality.

The much darker pants I mentioned are black flat front trousers with slanted front pockets and a straight leg fit down to the plain-hemmed bottoms. Sundance wears a wide black leather belt through the trousers’ tall belt loops, fastened through a large steel single-claw buckle.

Sundance’s gun belt is also wide black leather, slung around his waist with the actual holster for his Single Action Army laced around his left hip… as Robert Redford is left-handed. The cartridge loops for Sundance’s .45 Colt ammunition are located along the right side of his gun belt.

Sundance also shows his fondness for black hats, perhaps to reflect his darker personality. The black “cowboy” hat worn with this outfit is black felt with a flat crown and a relatively short brim that only slightly curls at the edges. It’s not the same hat he wears in Bolivia, which is differentiated by its much thicker ribbon. Rather than a ribbon, this hat has only a slim black band that is tied on the left side.

SUNDANCE

Sundance sticks to his color theme by wearing a pair of black leather riding boots.

SUNDANCE

The aftermath of too much dynamite.

Sundance is sparse with his accessories, wearing only a pair of pale yellow leather riding gloves when he needs them. Robert Redford also wears his usual silver ring on the third finger of his right hand, a gift from Hopi Indians that he had received in 1966 and has worn in “every film I have done since 1968,” as he told the Hollywood Reporter. A look at Redford’s filmography tells us that this was the first movie he made since 1967’s Barefoot in the Park, so it’s likely that this is also his first movie wearing the ring that his fans would see in every subsequent film.

 Go Big or Go Home

Arguably one of the finest and funniest moments in the film finds Butch and Sundance weary from days of relentless pursuit from Joe LeFors and his lawmen. Once we finally learn who those guys are, the two determine their best alternative is to escape by any means possible. After attempting to lose the posse by falling down a hillside, the two outlaws find themselves at a rocky ledge, overlooking the Animas River in Colorado.

SUNDANCE

Butch weighs their options, but Sundance knows he only has one desired option: to fight.

Up to this point, Sundance has been the voice of reason to the more amiable, easygoing Butch. Butch plans on running off to Bolivia… Sundance laughs him off. Butch suggests joining the U.S. Army to fight the Spanish-American War… Sundance laughs him off. As Butch weights their fight vs. flight options, Sundance wryly counters with:

They could surrender to us, but I wouldn’t count on that.

Once it’s determined that the posse is “going for position” and plans to shoot at them, Sundance prepares to fight. He checks his gun, takes aim, and – Butch halts. What if they jump? “Like hell we will,” refuses Sundance after a glimpse down to the water. This fits with his character, whom we know to be an accurate shot and a man of action. Butch persists.

Butch: I’ll jump first.
Sundance: No.
Butch: Then you jump first.
Sundance: No, I said!
Butch: What’s the matter with you?
Sundance: I can’t swim!

The sudden revelation is embarrassing, and Sundance knows it. Newman and Redford play the scene beautifully, allowing the statement to land before Redford gives a bashful nod… and Newman breaks out in laughter.

Of course, the true mortality of this situation forces its way back in as Butch slows himself down to realize, “the fall will probably kill you.” The men resign themselves to whatever fate awaits. They remove their jackets, pick up their holsters, and…

Oh-h-h-h-h-h-h-h, shiiiiiiiiiit!

How to Get the Look

Sundance manages to pull off a rustic combination of black and brown, although attempted copycats should keep in mind that he was a turn-of-the-century train robber. If you’re comfortable giving off that vibe, go for it.
SundanceUS-crop

  • Brown wide-waled corduroy jacket with black leather faced shirt-style collar, 5-button front, flapped hip pockets, and single rear vent
  • Black cotton work shirt with two chest patch pockets, front placket, and button cuffs
  • Black flat front straight-leg trousers with tall belt loops, slanted front pockets, and plain-hemmed bottoms
  • Black wide leather trouser belt with large steel single-claw buckle
  • Black wide leather gun belt with Ranger-style buckle, cartridge loops, and left-side holster with tie
  • Black felt cowboy hat with flat crown, slim tied band, and flat brim
  • Black leather riding boots
  • Pale yellow leather riding gloves
  • Silver tribal ring

The Gun

Few guns have received as much widespread recognition or as many nicknames as Colt’s venerable Single Action Army revolver. Whether you prefer the dubious moniker of “Peacemaker” or the more accurate “Gun That Won the West” (a title it shares with the Winchester rifle), there’s no denying that you’ve seen a Single Action Army if you’ve ever seen a Western movie in your life.

While filmmakers are probably a bit overly anxious to arm their outlaws with Colt Peacemakers, it’s documented that the Colt .45 was indeed the preferred sidearm for both Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, particularly while in the United States. During one of his first arrests, when he was merely a 20-year-old horse thief, Harry Longbaugh (the future “Sundance Kid”), had three six-shooters taken from him. Ten years later, he was a “professional” bandit, riding with Butch Cassidy’s Wild Bunch and packing a Single Action Army.

 

SUNDANCE

Sundance prepares to fight; Butch prepares to jump.

Whether intentionally or not, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid also correctly depicts Sundance’s preferred model of Single Action Army: the 4.75″-barreled “Quickdraw” or “Civilian” model. The SAA was offered in three standard barrel lengths – Cavalry (7.5″), Artillery (5.5″), and the Quickdraw (4.75″) – with shorter or longer barrel options available by special order. WesternLeatherHolster.com visited the Crook County Museum in Sundance, Wyoming this spring and actually discovered a holster that may have belonged to the Kid himself, remarking that the holster had been modified specifically for a revolver of that size: “cut down from 7 1/2″ to 4 1/2″ with rivets at the trigger guard and toe to keep the gun at the exact position the shootist wanted it to be”.

Butch and Sundance were proponents of the Colt .45 throughout their long career, although Thom Hatch’s book (which I mention below) reports that each man carried a Browning pistol and a Mauser carbine rifle during their final robbery in San Vicente, Bolivia in November 1908. Perhaps the two outlaws were more adaptable with the times than the movie suggests?

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the movie.

For a good read, I highly recommend Thom Hatch’s recent book about the duo: The Last Outlaws: The Lives and Legends of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Hatch’s book goes into plenty of detail about Butch and The Kid, including the guns they carried, Butch’s favorite whiskey (Mount Vernon rye), and the most likely story surrounding their now-famous demise.

The Quote

Think ya used enough dynamite there, Butch?


Will McAvoy’s Tan Cotton Sportcoat

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Jeff Daniels as Will McAvoy on The Newsroom (2012).

Jeff Daniels as Will McAvoy on The Newsroom (2012).

Vitals

Jeff Daniels as Will McAvoy, crusading TV news anchor and managing editor

New York City, Summer 2011

Series: The Newsroom
Episodes:
*
 “The Blackout Part I: Tragedy Porn” (Episode 1.08, aired August 12, 2012, dir. Lesli Linka Glatter)
* “The Blackout Part II: Mock Debate” (Episode 1.09, aired August 19, 2012, dir. Alan Poul)
* “The Greater Fool” (Episode 1.10, aired August 26, 2012, dir. Greg Mottola)
Costume Designer: Hope Hanafin

Background

The final three episodes of Aaron Sorkin’s The Newsroom find Will McAvoy in the midst of a rough summer. McAvoy is a brillianter-than-thou TV news journalist who had enjoyed popularity for years before he was reinvigorated to “do the news” right. This personal mission of his is equally inspired, bolstered, and hindered by his idealistic and talented executive producer Mackenzie MacHale (Emily Mortimer)… whom he also used to date before a messy breakup marred by some Paul Schneider-induced infidelity.

More than a year after McAvoy reinvented his news program to the chagrin of his ratings-hungry corporate overlords, he sells his soul to save the show’s popularity by focusing on the Casey Anthony trial rather than the more relevant news in the world. No wonder he needs therapy.

What’d He Wear?

A man of considerable vanity, Will McAvoy isn’t going to let summer heat get in the way of his fashion sense. Will finds a comfortable way to dress up his casual summer attire by donning a loosely-structured tan cotton sport coat with his usual button-up shirt and dark jeans.

Will shows off three different looks with his tan cotton sport coat and brown jeans.

Will shows off three different looks with his tan cotton sport coat and brown jeans.

Will’s tan jacket has a single-breasted 3-button front with notch lapels. The left lapel has a non-functioning diagonal slit serving as a decorative “buttonhole”. Edge stitching is present on all of the jacket seams from the notch lapels to the pockets. The breast pocket is a rounded patch, and the hip pockets are flapped. The 3-button cuffs match the same dark brown buttons on the front.

Will ignores Reese Lansing (Chris Messina), who appears to be auditioning for a musical.

Will ignores Reese Lansing (Chris Messina), who appears to be auditioning for a musical.

The jacket has a naturally loose and cooling fit due to its lack of structure, enhanced by the natural shoulders and rear vent. It is unlined with a pen pocket and flapped inside pocket on the left.

NewsWMtcs-CL1-Jkt3

Will always wears this jacket with a pair of dark brown cotton jeans. These are more subtle than the usual denim jeans and thus more passable as a dressier pant. They still have the same features as standard jeans: belt loops and the five-pocket layout (two slanted front pockets, coin pocket on the right, and two rear patch pockets) with rivets along the seam joints.

Will gives his psychiatrist a run for his money.

Will gives his psychiatrist a run for his money.

Will’s brown leather belt is a lighter shade of brown than his jeans. It fastens in the front through a rectangular steel single-claw buckle. This belt and jeans combination seems to be a particular favorite among Will’s first season casual wear.

Will first wears this jacket in “The Blackout Part I: Tragedy Porn” with a dark royal blue casual shirt. This shirt has a soft slim collar with dark buttons down the plain front. Underneath the buttons is a strip of four broken pale blue stripes, concealed when the shirt is buttoned although the top of the stripes are revealed as Will doesn’t button the collar.

A royal blue casual shirt in "The Blackout Part I: Tragedy Porn".

A royal blue casual shirt in “The Blackout Part I: Tragedy Porn”.

This royal blue shirt, which also has no pockets, makes another appearance two episodes later in the season finale, “The Greater Fool”. Based on the way the shirt wrinkles, it appears to be made at least partially of linen, perhaps a linen-cotton blend.

In the next episode, Will brings out a white multi-stripe shirt that he’d also worn in a few previous episodes with a blue sweater and jeans. The stripes are best described as double sets of brown and light blue vertical stripes that criss-cross on the inner collar and cuffs for a crooked check pattern.

Will looks beleaguered as usual in "The Blackout Part II: Mock Debate".

Will looks beleaguered as usual in “The Blackout Part II: Mock Debate”.

This cotton shirt is structured more like a traditional dress shirt and features a large point collar, breast pocket, and plain front with mother-of-pearl buttons. Interestingly, Will buttons the mitred cuffs but leaves the gauntlets unbuttoned. Although this shirt appears in other episodes, he only wears it with the tan cotton sport coat in “The Blackout Part II: Mock Debate”.

Will shows up in the “News Night 2.0” studio during the season finale, “The Greater Fool”, wearing another dark blue shirt with the tan sport coat and brown jeans, except this shirt has muted blue and brown stripes. It is similarly styled to his first shirt with its soft collar, plain front, button cuffs, and no pockets.

Will hovers over Maggie's Dell in "The Greater Fool".

Will hovers over Maggie’s Dell in “The Greater Fool”.

In case you haven’t caught on, Will’s casual wardrobe tends to be a happy mix of browns and blues. Since he wears a brown belt, a fashion horse like Will follows the rules and also wears brown leather shoes – in this case a pair of pointed-toe penny loafers. Although we barely see them in these episodes, he usually wears a pair of brown dress socks with these shoes and jeans.

NewsWMtcs-CL4-Feet

Will’s wristwatch has been identified as a Breguet Classique in white gold on a black alligator strap.

Thought you can't really tell from this screencap... I'm pretty sure it's a Breguet.

Thought you can’t really tell from this screencap… I’m pretty sure it’s a Breguet.

It’s likely the Classique 5157BB/11/9V6 which boasts a “silvered gold dial, hand-engraved on a rose engine” with a 38mm sapphire-backed case according to the Breguet site.

How to Get the Look

Will McAvoy gives us a sophisticated way to dress down for the summer while still looking professional enough for an office gig.

Now it's Will's turn to audition for that musical. At least we know he likes them.

Now it’s Will’s turn to audition for that musical. At least we know he likes them.

  • Tan cotton unstructured single-breasted sport coat with notch lapels, 3-button front, patch pocket, flapped hip pockets, 3-button cuffs, and single rear vent
  • Royal blue linen-cotton blend shirt with soft collar, plain front, and button cuffs
  • Dark brown cotton jeans
  • Brown leather belt with rectangular steel single-claw buckle
  • Brown leather pointed-toe penny loafers
  • Brown dress socks
  • Breguet Classique 5157 white gold 38mm case wristwatch with a silvered gold dial on black alligator leather strap

If you want a spot of color or some variety, Will would certainly approve of a striped shirt… as long as those stripes connect with other colors in the outfit.

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the first season, or just check out the whole series.

The Quote

I’m not crazy about being interviewed in print. Print journalists play it fast and loose with exclamation points. “I love the news” becomes “I love the news!” Suddenly, I’m deranged.


Quantum of Solace – Bond’s Polo and Cream Jeans in Haiti

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Daniel Craig as James Bond in Quantum of Solace (2008).

Daniel Craig as James Bond in Quantum of Solace (2008).

Vitals

Daniel Craig as James Bond, British government secret agent

Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Summer 2008

Film: Quantum of Solace
Release Date: October 31, 2008
Director: Marc Forster
Costume Designer: Louise Frogley

Background

Quantum of Solace ostensibly picks up minutes after Casino Royale left off (offering no feasible explanation of Bond’s radically different suit, though) and quickly establishes itself as the more action-oriented yin to the introspective Casino Royale origin story’s yang. The sequel was determined to feature every kind of chase possible; we are immediately treated to a pulse-pounding car chase along the mountains of Italy before the opening credits, and Bond finds himself engaged in a desperate foot chase through the town of Siena immediately following.

After a few relatively calm minutes of exposition in London, Bond is dispatched to follow up on a lead in Haiti where he engages in a deadly knife fight, motorbike chase, and – ultimately – a motorboat chase. All that remains is an air chase and, don’t worry, that’s coming later.

What’d He Wear?

Just before the release of Quantum of Solace in the fall of 2008, Duncan Campbell from James Bond Lifestyle managed to get some answers from the film’s costume designer, Louise Frogley, about some of the looks that Daniel Craig and his co-stars would be sporting in the latest Bond adventure. According to Campbell:

Louise wanted to keep Daniel’s casual wear almost like a uniform. So for example, the most published photos are in the blue jacket and jeans. All the casual outfits are a variation on this.

The mentioned blue jacket and jeans were worn with a polo and chukka boots during the film’s climactic action scene in Bolivia. Earlier in the film, Bond indeed wears a variation of this, also sporting a dark polo, dark jacket, and chukka boots with jeans – although these jeans are a dressier pair of cream jeans more appropriate for a warm summer day in the Caribbean climate. Matt Spaiser also wrote an extensive breakdown of this classy casual outfit on his blog, The Suits of James Bond.

Bond wears a black Tom Ford short-sleeve polo shirt designed similarly to the popular blue Sunsel polo that Daniel Craig had worn in Casino Royale. The fine cotton pique knit shirt has a two-button placket, worn unbuttoned, and a breast pocket with a rounded-bottom. The shirt has a short fit with two short vents on each side that separate the slightly longer back from the shorter shirt front.

Edmund Slate shows no respect for a fine shirt.

Edmund Slate shows no respect for a fine shirt.

The shirt’s color, specifically whether or not it is black or a dark navy blue, is debated by some. The Rittenhouse Archive costume cards, specifically card QC22, would seem to answer this question. The cards have been posted to the AJB007.co.uk forum, and one is still available on eBay as of August 6, 2015. Given this information, I’m sticking to my guns with my belief that the shirt is black.

The costume cards for this outfit's shirt, pants, and jacket. What do you think? Black or blue?

The costume cards for this outfit’s shirt, pants, and jacket. What do you think? Black or blue?

After Edmund Slate so rudely slashes Bond’s shirt (and his torso), Bond is forced to clean himself up before heading back into public. Luckily for him, Slate is a man of style who happens to wear the same size clothing as 007! In Slate’s closet, Bond finds a black polyester motorcycle jacket that zips over the bloodied polo to hide any evidence of the fatal fight. In addition to the zip front, the jacket has a large shirt-style collar, vertical welted hand pockets, and set-in sleeves. The cuffs close on a single button, and there is a small tab on the right and left sides of the waistband that adjusts the fit on one of two buttons.

Bond meets Camille.

Bond meets Camille.

The jacket is reportedly from Y-3, Yohji Yamamoto’s fashion line with Adidas, with style number #609980 eventually representing the Quantum of Solace jacket on the market for a brief time in late 2008. Bond’s jacket was slightly modified from the commercially-available version with the Y-3 logo on the back right shoulder hidden or removed and the left collar tab folded back. According to some, the waist-length jacket is actually made of Gore-Tex, a lightweight, waterproof fabric designed to be worn in all weather to repel rain while absorbing water vapor. (The scientific name for Gore-Tex is polytetrafluoroethylene – or ePTFE – and it was co-invented by William L. Gore and his son Bob in 1969.) Whether Bond’s jacket is truly Gore-Tex or not, it’s almost certainly constructed from a synthetic waterproof poly-fiber.

Although some questions surround the manufacture of the shirt and jacket, Bond’s pants in Haiti have been widely confirmed to be a pair of cream-colored Levi’s 306 STA-PREST jeans. Unlike traditional denim jeans, the 306 STA-PREST jeans are a diagonally-ribbed twill weave in a cotton and polyester blend. The non-stretching qualities of the strongly-woven blend keep the slim fit and tapered legs intact and free of wrinkles to complement Dan Craig’s muscular physique.

After this, poor Bond was probably banned from the Hotel Dessalines.

After his deceptions and deadly fights on site, poor Bond was probably banned from the Hotel Dessalines.

The now-discontinued cream color was only available in the U.K. and Belgium, according to Campbell’s post, where he states that they are “as told to [him] by Louise and David Zaritsky – Levi’s 307 STA-PREST trousers (almost a chino style trouser) in cream.” Campbell accurately describes the STA-PREST jeans as resembling chino trousers, and the most obvious visual differentiation is the STA-PREST’s jean-style five-pocket layout including two angled slash front pockets, right side coin pocket, and two back patch pockets. More information about the cream Levi’s from Quantum of Solace is available at James Bond Lifestyle.

Bond wears the same Prada 2c 4099 2 belt with these pants as he does later with his blue jeans in Bolivia. The belt is made of black cross-hatched Saffiano leather, a texture characteristic of both Prada and Ferragamo belts according to James Bond Lifestyle, and it closes through a square steel single-claw buckle.

QoS3Haiti-CL3-Pants2Belt

Bond also wears the same shoes as he wears later in Bolivia, a pair of dark brown sueded leather Church’s Ryder III chukka boots with two lace eyelets and Dainite® studded rubber soles that give him extra traction when running from motorbike to motorboat. He wears these boots with a pair of brown ribbed cotton socks that flow nicely from the boots up the legs.

Badass!

Badass!

These chukka boots appear to be Bond’s casual footwear of choice in Quantum of Solace. As Frogley told Campbell: “The Church’s Ryder III brown desert boots are the ONLY ones he sports in Quantum of Solace,” quelling any rumors that he wore other colors or boot makers in the film.

Interestingly, Bond always wears a black belt with his brown chukka boots. This is considered a faux pas by many, although it wasn’t the first time Craig’s Bond had done so; in Casino Royale, Bond wears a black belt with his brown chukka boots when he arrives in the Bahamas wearing a gray linen suit. Personally, I believe it’s more important that an outfit has a more consistent flow rather than sticking to arbitrary matching rules. Bond’s black belt nicely reflects the black top half of the outfit while the brown boots and socks soften the warm tones of the cream jeans. A stylish man like Daniel Craig knows how to dress, and the team of costumers outfitting him for the Bond series isn’t going to make a decision like that without thinking it through. If it looks good, it is good, and that’s the case here.

The inevitable Omega on Bond’s wrist is the same Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean 600m Co-Axial Chronometer 2201.50.00 that he wears throughout Quantum of Solace. The 42mm case and deployment clasp link bracelet are stainless steel. The round dial is black with a 3:00 date window and luminous hour markers and hands. The specific number of Bond’s watch, which was auctioned by Christie’s three years ago for £34,850, is #81087613. This Omega is the only one that 007 sports during Quantum of Solace, a reasonable decision given his rogue status for most of the film’s short timeline.

Disclaimer: Omega does not endorse breaking and entering.

Disclaimer: Omega does not endorse breaking and entering.

Bond’s sunglasses are also the same silver-framed Tom Ford TF108 aviators that we see throughout Quantum of Solace, worn with both suits and casual wear. These Italian-made sunglasses are on a semi matte rhodium frame with black temple tips and smoke blue lenses (19V).

QoS3Haiti-CX-TFSunglasses

Okay, now I’m thinking the shirt might be blue. Dammit.

Like the watch, Bond’s sunglasses were also sold at the “50 Years of James Bond” Christie’s auction in 2012 and fetched a decent £23,750, far more than the original $400 asking price.

Go Big or Go Home

The Haitian scenes (and M’s reaction to them) establish Bond as more ruthless than we’ve seen him before, willing to kill on his path for both answers and vengeance. To be fair, M is a bit harsh when she criticizes Bond’s methods. He honestly has no choice but to kill Mitchell and Slate as both men were attacking him with deadly force in each situation.

While the earlier Mitchell fight was a more traditional Bond-style battle with running, suits, guns, and exotic, setting-specific background action, the brawl with Edmund Slate in his room at the Hotel Dessalines is a dirty, violent fight more in the style of Jason Bourne than the Bond we’re used to. It makes sense that a 21st century agent would need to be trained for brutal hand-to-hand combat, and it’s a welcomed piece of realism unseen in the Bond series since the Orient Express melee between Sean Connery’s 007 and Robert Shaw’s Red Grant in From Russia with Love.

For those interested in getting their hands on Bond-ian props, the knife that Slate uses when attacking Bond is a Masters of Defense (MOD) Harkins Triton Out-the-Front automatic knife, as identified by James Bond Lifestyle. The plain-edged dagger extends to 8.45 inches long when the double-action black tungsten-coated 154CM stainless steel blade is flipped out to its full 3.6-inch length. The handle is milspec-anodized aircraft aluminum.

A less deadly device featuring in this scene is Bond’s Titanium silver edition Sony Ericsson C902 Cyber-shot cell phone with a slide-out lens cover and 5MP camera that Bond uses throughout Quantum to capture images of his foe to send back to MI6 for identification. More info about the tie-in phone available to promote the film can be found at James Bond Lifestyle.

QoS3Haiti-cropHow to Get the Look

Bond’s Haiti casual attire is an easily adaptable outfit to be comfortable but look stylish in an informal situation, especially one that may include some unexpected action.

  • Black waterproof Y-3 motorcycle jacket with large collar, zip front, vertical welted hand pockets, 1-button cuffs, and 2-button adjustable side tabs
  • Black cotton pique knit Tom Ford short-sleeve polo shirt with 2-button collar placket and rounded breast pocket
  • Cream cotton/polyester blend ribbed twill weave Levi’s 306 STA-PREST jeans with zip fly, belt loops, two angled slash front pockets, right coin pocket, and patch back pockets
  • Dark brown Church’s Ryder III sueded leather 2-eyelet chukka desert boots with Dainite® studded rubber soles.
  • Brown ribbed cotton socks
  • Black cross-hatch Saffiano leather Prada #2C-4099-2 belt with square steel single-claw buckle
  • Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean 600m Co-Axial Chronometer stainless steel wristwatch with steel bracelet, black face, and black bezel
  • Tom Ford TF108 aviator sunglasses with semi matte silver rhodium frame, black temple tips, and smoke blue 19V lenses

A very dark blue jacket and/or polo would probably also be a fine substitute for Craig’s black. Who knows… it may even be more accurate!

The Gun

Bond gets his hand on Slate’s case before he leaves the hotel and discovers a photo of Camille with a Smith & Wesson M&P 360 revolver, a not-so-subtle indication that Slate was hired to kill Camille.

"I think someone wants to kill you."

“I think someone wants to kill you.”

No longer available on the market, the M&P 360 is a scandium alloy-framed snubnose revolver designed from Smith & Wesson’s small J-frame series and meant for lightweight and easy concealment. It weighs less than a pound when unloaded – 13.3 ounces to be exact – and conceals easily with a 1.875″ barrel. The finish is matte black with black synthetic rubber grips.

Chambered for five rounds of .357 Magnum (or .38 Special +P) in its stainless steel cylinder, the M&P 360 would be a better choice for personal protection than for an assassin, especially since Slate’s weapon is already in a case and evidently not meant to be carried. Although “hammerless” revolvers are considered more practical for concealed carry, the M&P 360 with its exposed hammers offers a smooth, even trigger pull in both single-action and double-action modes, although firing the latter with the more powerful .357 Magnum tests the weapon’s accuracy (depending on the shooter’s stability, of course).

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the movie.

The Quote

I don’t have any friends.


Peaky Blinders – Tommy’s Gray Striped Herringbone Suit

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Cillian Murphy as Tommy Shelby on Peaky Blinders.

Cillian Murphy as Tommy Shelby on Peaky Blinders.

Vitals

Cillian Murphy as Thomas “Tommy” Shelby, cunning Peaky Blinders gang leader and jaded WWI veteran

Birmingham, England, Fall 1919

Series: Peaky Blinders
Episode: Episodes 1.01 – 1.05
Air Date: September 12, 2013 – October 10, 2013
Director: Otto Bathurst (Episodes 1.01 – 1.03) & Tom Harper (Episode 1.04 & 1.05)
Costume Designer: Stephanie Collie

Background

BBC Two’s Peaky Blinders is often compared to Boardwalk Empire or The Wire, an unfair comparison as the show stands up excellently on its own and the creator – Steven Knight – has even admitted that he’s never seen either show. One could argue that Peaky Blinders would certainly appeal to watchers of both shows, taking the urban grit of The Wire and the post-WWI family gangsterdom of Boardwalk Empire and launching them both across the pond to settle in Birmingham, England.

The Peaky Blinders were indeed a real name for an urban subculture in late 19th century England, named for the razor blades stitched into gangsters’ flat caps. When the gangster would get into an argument, he could whip off his cap and swing the razor-edged peak against an offender’s eyes… hence the name. The show takes some historical liberties with the gang, pushing their dominance further into the 20th century and centering it around the fictional Shelby family, led by bitter war veteran Tommy and his tough older sister Polly.

The show also depicts the Peaky Blinders as a more organized group of criminals than the glorified street urchins that the real members appear to have been. Although my knowledge of 19th century English street gangs is admittedly lacking, everything I’ve read makes the real Peaky Blinders sound more like the simplistic violent thugs from Herbert Asbury’s Gangs of New YorkPeaky Blinders prefers to present us with a family of ambitious mobsters and bookmakers who aren’t afraid to resort to violence – albeit, very gruesome violence in some instances – when it advances their business.

While Tommy Shelby could hardly be called the show’s moral compass, he relies on his wits just as much as his excitable brothers rely on their razor-sharp caps. Tommy is the conflicted anti-hero we’ve come to know and love thanks to predecessors like Tony Soprano, Walter White, Don Draper, Jimmy McNulty, Boyd Crowder, and “Nucky” Thompson to name a few. With Tommy, it’s hard to tell if he’s being driven by pride, anger, or bitterness (count how many times in an episode he mentions being “in France”!), but it’s safe to assume his criminal motivation comes from a powder keg of all three.

What’d He Wear?

Peaky Blinders introduces us to its protagonist immediately as Tommy Shelby rides a black horse through the dirty streets of 1919 Birmingham. He rides a gray striped herringbone tweed three-piece suit that serves as his main suit through most of the first season, appearing in the first five episodes. Tommy only wears four distinct suits in the show’s first season, with this one receiving a bulk of the screen time.

Straight Outta Small Heath.

Straight Outta Small Heath.

The simplicity of Tommy’s suit keeps it stylish for both 1919 gangsters and 2013 audiences. While every era is given to sartorial excesses, a no-nonsense dresser like Tommy avoids them for a utilitarian but fashionable day-to-day outfit. In an interview with Clothes on Film, the show’s costume designer Stephanie Collie discusses:

Cillian’s [suits] were all made by a great tailor called Keith Watson. He is amazing. I’ve been using him for years and years. He started off in the ’60s, working in Savile Row. This is where he learnt his trade; he’s a brilliant cutter. Cillian went to him to do all his fittings and they worked out perfectly. Cillian is a perfect model size too, so that was helpful. The best thing was how much the boys loved their clothes, and I think you get a feel of that by the way they walk; they have a swagger about them.

Indeed, Tommy’s suits give Cillian Murphy an athletic, lean silhouette that make him appear taller than his 5’9″ height on screen. This particular suit is gray herringbone tweed with a dark stripe in the cloth. All buttons on both the jacket and the waistcoat are covered in the same tweed suiting.

PEAKY BLINDERS

Tommy confers with Danny Whizz-Bang before a potential tragedy.

Tommy’s single-breasted suit jacket has notch lapels that roll over the top button, leaving two covered buttons revealed. He keeps a white linen pocket square neatly and unostentatiously folded in the welted breast pocket, and the flapped hip pockets sit straight on his waist.

PEAKY BLINDERS

Tommy makes the rounds of Birmingham on foot and on horseback.

The jacket fits comfortably with straight shoulders, a shallow chest, and a pulled-in waist. The back is ventless and the sleeves extend down from roped heads on the shoulders to the two widely spaced cuff buttons, also covered in the same herringbone tweed cloth.

PEAKY BLINDERS

Tommy’s matching vest (let’s say waistcoat, since it’s such a British show) is single-breasted with shawl lapels and a 6-button front. The lowest button, placed on the notched bottom, is left undone. The back of the waistcoat is dark burgundy silk lining with an adjustable strap.

PEAKY BLINDERS

Tommy seeks solace from a bottle of Bushmills.

Tommy places his gold Waltham Railroad open-faced pocket watch in the left of his waistcoat’s two welted hip pockets. It attaches to a gold fob through the waistcoat’s third buttonhole.

PEAKY BLINDERS

Note the details: sleeve garter, waistcoat lining, and trouser pockets (or lack thereof in the rear).

Costume designer Collie recognizes in her discussion with Clothes on Film that the trousers may have been the least historically accurate element of the suits. While the real Peaky Blinders were known to wear bell bottoms, Collie outfitted Tommy and his crew in straight leg trousers that maintain the lean, contemporary fit of the rest of the suit:

I would never want to use anything that’s historically wrong, but we heighten things to make them more relatable. So, trousers were quite short then, but we just thought we’d lift them a bit more. It’s not the end of the world if that’s not exactly how they were worn. Everything had to be sharp and smart for us.

Tommy stages a murder.

Tommy stages a murder.

The plain-hemmed trousers indeed have a short break, best seen when Tommy is on horseback. The straight fit continues up the leg through the waist, kept clean with a plain flat front with frogmouth pockets and no pockets on the back. Trousers rose high in 1919, a fact that Collie was more than happy to incorporate into the men’s suits:

I’ve said this before, but fashion always repeats itself. Three-piece suits look good on everyone. High-waisted trousers are the best thing a man can ever wear.

While much of Tommy’s wardrobe is still accessible in 2015, the hardest item to accurately recreate would be the shirt. Detachable collars were still the norm up through the 1930s, and even a street gang like the Peaky Blinders (at least on the show) adheres to the fashion by wearing both shirts and collars.

All of Tommy’s shirts are styled similarly with a white collar band, white buttons down a front placket, and attached single cuffs. His cuff links are simple brass oblongs, and he also wears brass link-style arm garters on his forearms.

If you're paying attention, you already saw the sleeve garters - right?

If you’re paying attention, you already saw the sleeve garters – right?

Most of his shirts are striped, although he does briefly wear a solid light blue shirt in the second episode.

PEAKY BLINDERS

Tommy’s first shirt on the series is white with a thin but bold purple stripe.

A production photo of Cillian Murphy in the first episode.

A production photo of Cillian Murphy in the first episode.

After that, Tommy wears a white shirt with a light gray stripe that he wears in the first, second, third, and fifth episodes. This, for all intents and purposes, is the Tommy shirt that would be the best way to start emulating the Peaky Blinders’ gang leader.

When worn without a collar, this shirt is totally open since there's no button in place at the neck.

When worn without a collar, this shirt is totally open since there’s no button in place at the neck.

Finally, the first and fourth episodes also feature Tommy wearing a pale blue shirt with fine blue and gray stripes.

Tommy declares war.

Tommy declares war.

Tommy’s collar throughout the first season is a stiff white detachable club collar – distinctive for its rounded ends – with no spread. He holds it into place with gold studs through the front and back, although only the front stud is exposed.

Tommy curiously never sports a tie in the first season. It was a conscious decision by Collie, who told Clothes on Film that:

Normally, of course, a man would have always worn a tie with a stiff collar, but we thought with Cillian Murphy especially that we wouldn’t do that, to keep everything sort of paired down, plus he’s got that beautiful face – what else do you need?!

…but it still leaves the question – why wouldn’t he do that? Is it Tommy’s way of rebelling against the uniforms that restricted him during the war and doom him to this day? Or is it a more practical decision, giving opponents one less thing to grab and use against him during a fight? (Boardwalk Empire fans will recall the way Eli Thompson utilized a necktie in the fourth season finale.)

Tommy holds his slim club collar in place with a gold stud.

Tommy holds his slim club collar in place with a gold stud.

The more rugged Al Swearengen on Deadwood went so far as to ignore wearing a shirt altogether, typically just wearing his dirty union suit under his gray striped three-piece suit. Then again, Swearengen didn’t care much what people thought about him… Tommy Shelby isn’t vain, but he doesn’t run Birmingham, either. He still needs to look passable to gain entry into certain high places.

Tommy Shelby’s preferred footwear is a pair of black leather combat-style cap-toe half boots with front lacing through nine eyelets. They resemble the “boondockers” issued by the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps during World War II.

His socks are gray and rise high enough on his calf that his leg isn’t exposed when riding horseback pulls the short break of his trousers up even higher.

PEAKY BLINDERS

Switching to the other end of the axis, we come to the “peaky blinder” itself – Tommy’s mixed barleycorn tweed newsboy cap. Tommy’s cap differs from a standard flat cap by the button on the top center of the plump, paneled crown which – like the suit buttons – is covered in the same tweed as the rest of the cap.

PEAKY BLINDERS

The titular peaky blinder itself!

Tommy’s razor is stitched in just above the cap’s peak. Although brown and gray wools make up the majority of the hat, brighter threads of red, yellow, green, and blue are mixed in.

PEAKY BLINDERS

Hence the title.

Tommy combats the brisk Birmingham fall weather with a white striped henley-style pullover undershirt. Tommy’s cotton undershirts typically have a red-striped front bib with four large white buttons. They are long-sleeved and often peek through the cuffs of his dress shirts.

As the weather cools down in the fifth episode, set in November, Tommy braces for the Birmingham chill by donning his topcoat, a black herringbone wool single-breasted overcoat with large notch lapels and a 3-button front, which he almost always leaves open. It has large hip pockets with the flaps tucked in, roped sleeveheads, a long single vent in the back, and black silk lining that differentiates it from the red-lined topcoat he wears in the second season.

PEAKY BLINDERS

The coat is best seen during the Shelbys’ confrontation with the Lee brothers in the second episode when Tommy wears it with his distinctively darker charcoal herringbone suit.

A surprising affectation for such a taciturn gangster and relatively simple dresser, Tommy also sports a simple gold ring on his left pinky. He adds a second ring to the other hand in his second season.

Stephanie Collie summed up her thoughts on Peaky Blinders style in her Clothes on Film Q&A:

These men probably only had maybe one or two suits, which is how we worked as well. Cillian has literally only got one or two suits throughout, but hopefully you don’t even notice that because you’re engrossed in the story. The clothes are there to be part of the story, but you don’t want anyone to go “oh, wow!” when they see them. They can never be more important than what’s going on in the scene.

For more about Peaky Blinders style at Clothes on Film, check out this page.

Go Big or Go Home

Although the Peaky Blinders are undoubtedly British and often don’t see eye-to-eye with the Irish, Tommy sure has a thing for Irish vices. (Of course, Cillian Murphy himself is Irish, so that helps.)

His preferred brand of whiskey is Old Bushmills, made to this day at the Old Bushmills Distillery in Northern Ireland, considered to be the oldest licensed distillery in the world with more than 400 years of continuous production under its belt. You can still pick up a bottle of Bushmills… especially if you want to piss off the Catholics willing to shell out a few extra dollars for Jameson. (Not that I have anything against Jameson!)

Tommy takes a drag from a Sweet Afton while enjoying his Bushmills at the Garrison.

Tommy takes a drag from a Sweet Afton while enjoying his Bushmills at the Garrison.

Tommy also notably smokes Sweet Afton cigarettes in every episode. Outside of its appearance as Margot Tenenbaum’s favorite cigarette in The Royal Tenenbaums, Sweet Aftons are little known in the United States. Another Irish brand, Sweet Aftons were introduced in 1919 by the Dundalk company P.J. Carroll & Co., which has since become a subsidiary of British American Tobacco. The name comes from Robert Burns’ poem “Sweet Afton” to appeal to the Scottish market. The brand has since been discontinued, although Peaky Blinders fans can catch Tommy Shelby lighting one a constant string of them (actually herbal white-filtered cigarettes in a Sweet Afton case) with Morelands safety matches.

And finally, the most notable of all of Tommy’s Irish vices is Grace Burgess, the devious RIC secret agent that infiltrates the Garrison pub and steals his heart… even after he nearly pimps her out to Billy Kimber. But we’ll get to that later.

Of course, whatever you do is instantly made more badass if you’re listening to the show’s theme song, “Red Right Hand” from Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds’ 1994 album Let Love In.

How to Get the Look

The Peaky Blinders rule Birmingham on the series, and its members aren’t afraid to show it in their swagger. A tweed suit is practical and comfortable for cooler weather, and – if worn correctly and accessorized well – it can project a more rugged image than the classic professorial connotation. You might want to check local laws and regulations about sewing a razor blade into your cap, though…

PeakyTomS1Gray-crop

  • Gray striped herringbone tweed three-piece tailored suit, consisting of:
    • Single-breasted jacket with notch lapels, 3-roll-2 covered-button front, welted breast pocket, straight flapped hip pockets, 2 covered-button cuffs, and ventless back
    • Single-breasted waistcoat with shawl lapels, 6 covered-button front, notched bottom, welted hip pockets, and dark burgundy silk back lining with adjustable strap
    • Flat front high-rise trousers with frogmouth front pockets, straight leg, and plain-hemmed short break bottoms
  • White-and-gray striped cotton collarless shirt with front placket, white collar band, and single cuffs
  • White detachable stiff club collar
  • Brass oblong cuff links
  • Brass chain-link arm garters
  • Black herringbone wool single-breasted topcoat with large notch lapels, 3-button front, flapped hip pockets, and long single vent
  • Black leather 9-eyelet front-laced cap-toe “boondocker” half boots
  • Gray tall socks
  • Striped suspenders
  • White cotton long-sleeve henley undershirt with red-striped bib and 4-button front
  • White cotton boxer shorts
  • Gray & brown mixed barleycorn tweed newsboy cap
  • Waltham gold railroad pocketwatch, worn on gold chain with fob
  • Gold pinky ring

The Gun

Tommy Shelby’s personal sidearm is a Webley Mk VI revolver, appropriate for a British war veteran of World War I that would have been issued the weapon. Introduced in 1915 and adopted that same year by the British military, the Mk VI was the final and most successful iteration of the Webley .455 service revolver.

Tommy gives Grace a hands-on tutorial in firing a Webley revolver, not realizing that she's no stranger to shooting others.

Tommy gives Grace a hands-on tutorial in firing a Webley revolver, not realizing that she’s no stranger to shooting others.

The first Webley break-top revolver was adopted for British military service in November 1887 and was distinctive for its 4″ barrel and “bird’s beak” grips. The modified Mk II and Mk III models followed, but no major differences came until the Mk IV was developed for the Boer War. The Mk IV used better steel, an updated blast-shield, and a barrel-affixed cylinder axis. The “Boer War” Model Mk IV lasted from July 21, 1899 (Ernest Hemingway’s birthday) until December 9, 1913, when the Mk V was ruled out. As England quickly found itself at war, a better service revolver would be needed. The Mk VI was adopted on May 24, 1915 and featured a long 6″ barrel and squared target grips.

Tommy whips out his Webley during a showdown with Freddie Thorne.

Tommy whips out his Webley during a showdown with Freddie Thorne.

Although replaced by the Enfield No. 2 .38-caliber revolver in 1932, the .455 Webley Mk IV remained in favor with British troops well into WWII due to their reliability and power. The automatic extraction with the break-top action allowed for quick, easy reloading and the .455 Webley round remains one of the most powerful cartridges to be chambered in a top-break revolver. Although he may be bitter about his military service, Tommy Shelby couldn’t have chosen a better sidearm for his violent rule of the Birmingham underworld.

Mr. Pink would have a few angry words about whether or not Tommy and Freddie were acting professional...

Mr. Pink would have a few angry words about whether or not Tommy and Freddie were acting professional

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Buy the first season when it’s released in October, or catch the first two seasons on Netflix!

The Quote

If they want them back this bad, they’ll have to pay. That’s the way of the world. Fortune drops something valuable in your lap, you don’t just dump it on the bank of the cut.


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