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Are there any gold button blazer guys here?
Cheers
Dear Mimile,mimile wrote:A blazer is a DB coat with metal buttons. No metal buttons: no blazer, just a DB coat.
Channeling Crocodile Dundee: that's not a blazer...now this is a blazer:mimile wrote:A blazer is a DB coat with metal buttons. No metal buttons: no blazer, just a DB coat.
I might not ever be brave enough for big shiny gold buttons on my blazers. So far, my halfhearted approach to the topic has been modest sized brass buttons with black patina. I´ve got a beautiful vintage SB set during the early 90´s and they have been hopping into the latest commission ever since. They are in their 3rd. tour already.alden wrote: Are there any gold button blazer guys here?
mimile wrote:Dear Davidhuh,
The blazer originated from Royal Navy wear. Their navy coats had (still have? I am not certain) metal buttons. This is the blazer.
Dear Mimile,mimile wrote:IMHO, a man who has confidence can wear metal buttons with much ease.
You made a good choice David.For the first version, I went for a very dark brown horn
Perfectly right. Indeed the blazer term identifies a coat with metal buttons and/or a crest attached to the breast pocket that indicates the membership of a given Club or Sport Society. According to the the above common characteristics many type of blazers, differing in colors and style, can be identified,within the classical male dressing universe: yacht/nautical blazer,rowing blazer, cricket blazer, golf blazer and tennis blazer.couch wrote:On the other hand, an increasing number of people seem not to know the term odd jacket or sport jacket, or simply jacket, and call everything a blazer.
It is likely, as reported by Mr. Giancarlo Maresca (a deep italian connoisseur of the male dressing history) that the rowing blazer may represent the first example of this kind of coat, as documented by the appearance in 1825 of a red jacket adopted by the members of the Lady Margaret boat club, founded in the same year.The visit of Queen Victoria to the HMS Blazer ship , that gave origin to the nautical blazer, can be dated to 1837.mimile wrote:The blazer originated from Royal Navy wear. Their navy coats had (still have? I am not certain) metal buttons. This is the blazer. Blazers blaze (shine) only because of metal, otherwise they would not.
mimile wrote:
A blazer is a DB coat with metal buttons. No metal buttons: no blazer, just a DB coat.
http://www.gettyimages.it/license/112064935alden wrote:
Mimile I believe is correct in saying that a Blazer refers to a DB or Reefer (longer) coat with gold buttons but as Couch says the term has lost much of its initial meaning especially in the US.
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