Tom Stubbs - Thomas Stubbs
Transcription
Tom Stubbs - Thomas Stubbs
THE SHARPENER Tom Stubbs à la mod Playful interpretations of the summer parka are giving 1960s style new edge, says Tom Stubbs l This spring is the fourth season of The Gigi, the menswear label founded by brothers Pierluigi (Gigi) and Mario Boglioli after they sold their eponymous label. Cracking pieces for summer include the Ziggy doublebreasted blazer (£510, pictured right), an unstructured take on a naval jacket in striped cotton piqué or muted seersucker; the Shedir seersucker shirt (£165) in cream with black polka dots, or in deep washed blue; and the Devon linen/cotton trousers (£230, pictured right). A brand worth discovering. +309-517 685; www.ieye.it/thegigi and see Trunk, 8 Chiltern St, London W1 (0207486 2357; www.trunkclothiers.com). I ride a GS scooter with my hair cut neat. Wear my wartime coat in the wind and sleet,” sang Roger Daltrey in The Who’s 1973 hit I’ve Had Enough, a track that later appeared in the band’s mod opera Quadrophenia. By wartime coat, Daltrey was referring to an item of army surplus kit: the US Army M1951 fishtail parka with a drawstring waist and hood that was adopted by the early-1960s mod movement, being ideal for keeping both warm and dry(ish) while riding scooters and protecting their precious Italian-style mohair tailoring. While websites dedicated to M1951s now see mint-condition examples, complete with fur trim and silk lining, change hands for in excess of £500, new takes on the classic are fuelling a cool summer trend. Some, like Margaret Howell’s olive and navy Ventile parkas (£875), with flank pockets (just where the drawstring toggles Clockwise from left: Joseph cotton poplin Camden parka, £595. Brioni nylon parka, £1,820. Corneliani cotton/nylon trench, £2,300. Nudie Jeans nylon Elliot parka, £230 Japanese mills are making nylons to rival their mastery of denim Clockwise from above left: Berluti cotton/linen parka, £3,100. E Tautz wool/nylon parka, £995. Phil Daniels in Quadrophenia. Christopher Raeburn cotton MMAC mac, £395. Z Zegna nylon kite parka, £515 example, Nudie Jeans’s Elliot parka in muted camouflage (£270), or special forces-style black Japanese nylon (£230, pictured far right), which has a matte, waxy quality. Other über-light fabrics include parachute-like materials, which evoke 1980s-era Katharine Hamnett tops. Joseph’s midnight-blue or optic-white drawstring Camden parkas (£595, pictured right of centre) come in almost papery cotton-poplins, giving a new-age feel to the mod look. Brioni’s extraordinary high-tech nylon parkas (£1,820, pictured second from top far right) in aqua, jade or grey (some with dashes of orange), with asymmetric panels and brushstroke-like markings, have a diaphanous membrane quality, while Z Zegna’s pale-grey kite parka (£515, pictured far left) in performance nylon has a sports feel. At E Tautz the navy or cherry summer parka (£995, pictured second from top far left) comes in Loro Piana’s Rain System fabric, a high-tech wool/nylon mix that drapes beautifully, cinches in at howtospendit.com the back to accentuate the fishtail and has a great swing to it. The poppers, zip, buttons and drawstring toggles are all in futuristic-looking polished steel. This is a really special remodelling of the original parka. While E Tautz keeps most of the original features, some designers have pared back or tweaked the format. Take Corneliani, which has an extra-long, muted-cornflower cotton/nylon trench (£2,300, pictured top far right) with no hood; or rejuvenated brand Pal Zileri, which has a luxury parka (£846) in graphic maroon jacquard nylon. Further takes on parkas mix in elements from other classic outerwear, such as Berluti’s navy cotton/linen parka (£3,100, pictured top far left), which borrows from sports jackets with nubuck button stands and pocket trims and a lining with taped seams, and from trenches with a storm yolk on the back. Even Sting’s character from Quadrophenia, Ace Face, might have been tempted to give up his black leather trench for that. ✦ howtospendit.com l Orlebar Brown’s photo-printed swim shorts of beach and summery scenes have been so popular that this month the brand is launching a new SnapShorts service, which allows buyers to feature their own photos on three styles of shorts – the long-cut Dane, mid-length Bulldog or short Setter (example pictured above, £395) – using the SnapShort app. Delivery time is three weeks. 206 Westbourne Grove, London W1 (020-3441 6289; www.orlebarbrown.co.uk). PARKA LIFE Berluti, 43 Conduit St, London W1 (020-7437 1740; www.berluti.com). Brioni, 32 Bruton St, London W1 (020-7491 2101; www.brioni.co.uk). Christopher Raeburn, 020-3609 8449; www. christopherraeburn.co.uk and see Selfridges. Corneliani, 131 New Bond St, London W1 (0207493 7921; www.corneliani.com). E Tautz, 71 Duke St, London W1 (020-7629 8809; www. etautz.com). Joseph, 2 Savile Row, London W1 (020-7439 8444; www.joseph-fashion.com). Margaret Howell, 34 Wigmore St, London W1 (020-7009 9009; www.margarethowell.co.uk). Nudie Jeans, 29 D’Arblay St, London W1 (0207494 3655; www.nudiejeans.com). Pal Zileri, 125 New Bond St, London W1 (020-7493 9711; www.palzileri.com). Selfridges, 400 Oxford St, London W1 (0800-123 400; www.selfridges.com). Z Zegna, 124-125 New Bond St, London W1 (0207495 8260; www.zegna.com). QUADROPHENIA (1979), © THE KOBAL COLLECTION/CURBISHLEY-BAIRD cinch in) and steel zips and poppers, are faithful in design to the original M1951, but I’m particularly taken by the fresh interpretations – from those in futuristic super-light fabrics to military-inspired formal cuts. Christopher Raeburn’s collections are always military in feel, and experimentations with parkas in his Remade collection include a lime ultra-lightweight mac version (£395, pictured near right) in Korean cotton. Japanese mills are now making really top-notch nylons – to rival their mastery of denim – which are helping give parkas a new edge. Take, for 86 OUT AND ABOUT l Cutting-edge retailer Hostem has moved round the corner from east London’s hip Redchurch Street to a former art gallery on Old Nichol Street, where clothes hang from an oversized picture frame. Alongside established brands such as Rick Owens and Yohji Yamamoto are some emerging labels with covetable pieces: the forest-green, rough-edged Wysman jacket (£1,275) and trousers (£485) by Monad; Nicholas Daley’s tailored workwear in Halley Stevens cotton (jacket, £385, trousers, £355, and waistcoat, £230, pictured left); Jeffrey Jonathan Smith organic cotton shirts (£280); and handwoven silk scarves (£485) by Atelier Bâba. 28 Old Nichol St, London E2 (0207739 9733; www.hostem.co.uk). 87