• Home
  • ABOUT
  • Pick Your Fix
    • Advertising
    • Architecture
    • Civics & Rights
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Holidays
    • Home Life
    • Interior Design
    • Science & Tech
    • Transportation
  • The Library
    • Books on My Shelf
    • BLOGS I FOLLOW
  • Adventures in the Field
    • In Search of Stuff
    • In & Around New England
    • In & Around Michigan
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • RSS

My History Fix

the Fun Side of History!

MEN’S SUITS 1600-1989: AN EVOLUTION

April 1, 2016

Men’s suits are basically a uniform, right? Jacket, pants, shirt, tie…pretty basic. A uniform puts you in a frame of mind; you’re ready to go about your business, whatever it may be. In 2016, they can be fairly staid or you can change it up with a pop of color in your tie, or maybe even a patterned shirt.

Back in the day there was a lot more going on!

It’s pretty amazing to go back a few hundred years and see how much things have changed! Fashion is fun, so let’s rev up the DeLorean and take a trip back in time…

(To be clear, we are exploring the equivalent of the business suit. So there is a class distinction, as well as a disregard for trends in casual wear in this post.

THE 1600’s

men's suits 1600s

1629 Day Wear, via Historic UK; 1650 Dutch style, via Historic UK; 1687 Paris, France, via Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

These dudes aren’t peasants. And the first two were “day wear.” Wow!

THE 1700s

men's suits 1700s

1700s Great Coat, via Colonial Williamsburg; 1765 France, via Victoria and Albert Museum; 1779 Overcoat, via History of Fashion Design.

Things are starting to simplify a bit, but still those chilly stockings. Note the advent of the tricorn hat.

THE 1800s

1800s

1800 via City Furniture; 1857 photo of Richard Ansdell, via Victoria and Albert Museum; 1870 via Susanna Ives; 1871 via Victoria and Albert Museum.

Now things really start to change, to tone down. Maybe I’m going against plan, but the “artist’s suit” was a particular form and was typically of solid, drab fabric. It’s not dressy, but it isn’t casual wear either.

The array of suiting at the cusp of the twentieth century…

men's suits 1899

via Mitzi’s Miscellany

  THE 1900s

men's suits 1900=1945

1914 suits, via Rare Posters; c. 1935, via Attire Club; 1943 Zoot Suits, via Study; c. 1945, via The Gentlemanual.

During the very late nineteenth and early twentieth century the business suit, as we know, it makes the scene. The Zoot Suit—which was so controversial it caused riots in Los Angeles—is pretty much the only departure from the mold until the 1970s. There are some subtle changes in the 50s and 60s, differences in lapel and tie widths. Nothing too exciting, so let’s just jump ahead to the good stuff…

THE 1970s

men's suits 1970s

1972 Simplicity pattern, via Art Fire; mid-1970s JC Penney catalog, via Pinterest; 1974 plaid doubleknit suits via Pinterest; 1979 corduroy suits, via Pinterest.

Welcome to Crazy Town! It’s plaid, it’s colorful, it’s more plaid, don’t forget the corduroy, and wait…

What…

Is…

This…

 

men's suit 1970s crazy

via BuzzFeed

And…THIS…????

men's jumpsuits 1970s

via BuzzFeed

Okay, okay, I know this is nowhere near what these studs would have worn to a business meeting, but a jumpsuit is a kind of suit…right? I just couldn’t leave it out. I hope you aren’t too traumatized.

THE 1980s

men's suits 1980s

c. 1984 Crockett & Tubbs, via Fashionisto; c. 1986, via Pinterest; c. 1987, via Pinterest.

Speaking of color and pattern, the Eighties had its own brand…a lot of pastels and brights. And while the collars and ties shrunk considerably (even disappeared) compared to the Seventies, the volume increased. Can you say pleats? More pleats? And those shoulder pads? Baggy rolled or pushed up sleeves…hot. The slouchy look harks back to the Zoot Suit. I’m sure the lawyers and bankers of the day wore more traditional cuts (unless Detective James Crockett decided to switch careers), but these styles scream Eighties!

I find it interesting that men used to dress just as fancy as women. And while menswear diverged into cleaner, simpler cuts for a long time, once we hit the later twentieth century, both mens and womenswear tended to feature similar trends. Big collars and plaid in the Seventies, volume and color in the Eighties…do you agree?

I have some great fashion memories from the 1970s and 1980s! Share your recollections in the comments below, I’d LOVE to hear about them!

And let’s hear it for Adam and the Ants, rolling all these fashion trends into one!

Adam & the Ants

via Men’s Fashion Magazine

Filed Under: Fashion 2 Comments

<- MY CINEMA FIX: COME SEPTEMBER
ART DECO: MISTAKEN IDENTITY ->

Comments

  1. Linda says

    April 1, 2016 at 7:17 pm

    “And what is this” has got to be the biggest pointed collar ever, and that jacket really sets it off! The jumpsuits from the 70s, WOW!!! The 80s were AWESOME too! I have to say the 60s with the very narrow ties and lapels were very tame!

    Reply
  2. Margie says

    April 1, 2016 at 11:54 pm

    It’s interesting to see men have fashion too and have to update their wardrobe just as women do.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Never Miss a Fix!

ABOUT

THE FUTURE…AS VIEWED FROM 1938

  This week I was inspired by my flight to Detroit to check out the June 1938 issue of Popular Mechanics which I picked up at the SOWA Vintage Market back in February; the one with the cut-out … [Read More...]

Brimfield, 50 inch ruler

BRIMFIELD FOR THE FUN OF IT!

It’s Brimfield Time again!  I know, I’ve written about Brimfield before, sort of a primer if you will, and I wrote about it again over on Motor City Expat…BUT…it feels different for me this time … [Read More...]

1930s facetime, retrofuturism

RETROFUTURISM

What is retrofuturism?  It’s the future as imagined in the past, usually through illustration.  And it is priceless! I love it for two reasons: It’s interesting to see what were considered … [Read More...]

The Old Manse

WEEPING AT A HOUSE MUSEUM

Am I the only person to have nearly melted down in the middle of touring a house museum? Why would anyone do such a thing? Well… I recently visited the Old Manse in Concord, the former home of the … [Read More...]

NEW YEAR’S IN NYC…BACK IN THE DAY

What did New Yorkers do to celebrate the New Year before there was a ball to drop? According to the January 1916 edition of The Lotus Magazine, they “went calling” on New Year’s Day. Practiced from … [Read More...]

copyright © 2021 cuisine theme by viva la violette