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Replacing Lacoste?

StanleyVanBuren

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Originally Posted by avatar
That subculture is across the Atlantic.

I spend time here & there.

And we're getting way off-topic here, but we certainly have our equivalents here in the US, we just haven't been as clever in naming them.

But I get your point, there aren't nova-check cap wearing hoodlums running rampant across the US tarnishing the Burberry brand. Which is good for me, since I like their polos.
wink.gif
 

WN2

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Originally Posted by matadorpoeta
sergio tacchini

Affordable and good fit, but I've been a little disappointed by quality. Somehow they don't feel as good as competition, some of which has been already mentioned. Not bad, however.
 

demeis

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I'm leaning toward fred perry if they do a nice italian line, or John Varvatos now. We did burberry awhile ago and had good success with it. The other buyer doesn't like it and won't be convinved it would be a good buy. I know several other stores who have dropped lacoste for burberry now.
 

avatar

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Originally Posted by StanleyVanBuren
I spend time here & there.

And we're getting way off-topic here, but we certainly have our equivalents here in the US, we just haven't been as clever in naming them.

But I get your point, there aren't nova-check cap wearing hoodlums running rampant across the US tarnishing the Burberry brand. Which is good for me, since I like their polos.
wink.gif


Yeah, here it's the white trash wearing the "urban brands" like Sean John, etc. If there's any high end brand that hoodlums wear, it's BAPE.
 

soulstylist

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Wasn't Tacchini more 80s casuals?

...together with the likes of Pringle, Lyle & Scott, Farahs etc.
 

Alex Roest

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Originally Posted by soulstylist
Wasn't Tacchini more 80s casuals?

...together with the likes of Pringle, Lyle & Scott, Farahs etc.


Lyle & Scott are doing an interesting vintage range polo shirt at the mo'......as for quality Barbour ( strange as it may sound to some, perhaps ) does some good stuff as well.....
 

Omegablogger

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Originally Posted by soulstylist
Wasn't Tacchini more 80s casuals?

...together with the likes of Pringle, Lyle & Scott, Farahs etc.


Add Fila in there and that about nails it. I used to have a lot of such clothes, what stands out for me is how the quality has declined over the last 20 odd years.

If you like that stuff then the film The Business features a fair bit of it [film is pants though].

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0429715/
 

bigbadbuff

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I guess I will go against the grain here a bit. I am not a fan of FP, Burberry, and that ilk. Mesh polos by most makers are so bleh. Polo and Lacoste can get away with it because they are both classic and well enough made, however overexposed they might be. Bobby Jones, Paul and Shark, etc. have nice fabrics but the cuts are made for men who like to emulate golfers, ie baggy cuts with sleeves that come down past their elbows.

I would 2nd some other suggestions here for James Perse, Ballntyne. Polo has tons of different cuts, styles, fabrics, hard to go wrong there. RLPL is great but twice the price.

Anyone remember Britches polos, with the warthog?
 

Rolo

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Originally Posted by bigbadbuff
.

Anyone remember Britches polos, with the warthog?


Did Britches of Georgetowne ever expand much outside of the DC area?
 

soulstylist

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Originally Posted by bigbadbuff
...Polo and Lacoste can get away with it because they are both classic and well enough made...


THE classic tennis polo is the Perry. And Mr. Perry is a classic for himself...

Local lad Frederick John Perry, was born in Stockport in 1909 but moved down South while he was still at school and fell in love with table tennis. He practiced his ping pong every night, eventually becoming world champion at the tender age of 18. He then promptly retired from the game and got busy with his latest obsession, lawn tennis.

Unfortunately his Stockport bad boy style did not go down too well with the snobbish tennis heirarchy. His habit of changing his clothes mid-game to stay looking fresh, leaping over the net at the end of each match and dating a string of actresses and models caused major problems for this working class playboy. They were especially displeased when he went on to win Wimbledon three times in a row.

After the third victory he decided to move to America and become a pro at the Beverley Hills Tennis Club, giving lessons to Charlie Chaplin, David Niven, Errol Flynn and the Marx Brothers whilst establishing himself on the Hollywood party circuit.

In the late 40s Fred was approached by Tibby Wegner, an Austrian footballer who had invented a novel anti-perspirant device worn around the wrist. Fred made a few changes and the sweatband was born.

Tibby's next idea was to produce a sports shirt which was to be made from white knitted cotton pique with short sleeves and buttons down the front. Launched at Wimbledon in 1952, the Fred Perry polo shirt was an immediate succes.

It was only available in white until the late 50s when the mods picked up on it and demanded a more varied colour palette. It was the shirt of choice for diverse groups of lads throughout the 60s and 70s, ranging from the skinheads to the Northern Soul scene and Manchester's very own "Perry Boys".

Now recognised as a classic British staple in anyone's wardrobe, we wonder if history would have been any different if they'd gone for Fred's first choice for the emblem - a pipe.
...text stolen from oipolloi.com
 

bigbadbuff

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Originally Posted by Rolo
Did Britches of Georgetowne ever expand much outside of the DC area?

It was definitely here in Richmond, but not sure how much further out.
 

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