Crittenden

A Return to the Ivy League

We just received the first models for the Crittenden Fall 13 line, and they are everything you would expect from this longtime menswear industry veteran, Crit Rawlings.

crit

After 50 years of working for and leading such venerable names as Norman Hilton, Polo and Oxxford, Crit is now producing a line of soft coats for specialty stores that pays homage to the best days of the Ivy League Look. The coats are made in Tennessee by Hardwick Clothes, a 135 year old tailored clothing manufacturer that is still family owned. The coats, in Shetland Woolens that harken to the days of casual elegance, feature a 3/2 rolled lapel, lapped seams, swelled edges, patch pockets w/ flap and a hook vent. The unpadded shoulder has a forward slope. The construction and fit is very soft, a silhouette that looks as good with jeans and cords as it does with gabardine.

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Seersucker & Tweeds blog by American Suit Store

Made in America

A very good article by Billy Neville on the Importance of Made in America Apparel

Those who would write the obituary for “Made in the USA” are premature, period.

By Billy Neville

One need only look across the broad expanse of America’s heartland to see that we are not only competing but actually winning! Strong evidence piles up daily; American made is reassuming its rightful place as the leader in so many vital segments of our economy, particularly apparel and textiles. Studies show that shoppers these days are checking to see where the products they’re purchasing are made.

Reasons for this resurgence range from emotional to economic. Emotional, because there is in many of us a very real sense of American pride. Economic, because our factories and wages are once again “in line” especially once transportation costs are factored into the equation. Add to this fast delivery, top quality and a committed work force, and the American-made advantage is increasingly apparent.

A few success stories: New England Shirt Company in New Bedford, Massachusetts; Hardwick Clothes in Cleveland, Tennessee; dozens of denim makers on the West Coast. Those more under the radar include Phar-Shar in Leitchfield, Kentucky (making top quality outerwear and bags for so very many brands); Char-Dan in Thomson, Georgia (where hundreds of workers have never ceased producing top-quality trousers); Brigade in tiny Tylertown, Mississippi (once home to Haspel, now making quality denim); Brooklyn Denim in Brooklyn, New York; and Raleigh Denim in Raleigh, North Carolina. You want more? How about The Pointer Brand in Bristol, Tennessee (they’ve been at it since 1933); The Red Heel Sock Company in Osage, Iowa (home of the iconic Sock Monkey); Faribault Woolen Mills in Faribault, Minnesota (producing incredible blankets for the military); and Stormy Kromer in Ironwood, Michigan (a headwear company that’s recently expanded into a full lifestyle brand).

Stormy Kromer is a great case study in how to market heritage. George “Stormy” Kromer was a real guy: a semi-pro baseball player and railroad engineer. Born in 1876 in Kaukuna, Wisconsin, he grew up with baseball and would eventually play on nearly 30 semi-pro teams throughout the Midwest. He might have continued in baseball but he met Ida, and before Ida’s father would allow her hand in marriage, our ballplayer needed to find “real work”, which meant the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad and long, cold trips across the plains.

Stormy was an engineer and to see where he was headed he had to stick his head out the window…into the wind. In 1903, he asked Ida (now his wife and an excellent seamstress) to modify an old baseball cap to help keep it on in windy weather. The all-cloth cap with the soft, canvas visor was a departure from the traditional fedora of the day. It was more comfortable, and because of its six-panel fit and unique modification, it stayed put. Soon other railroad workers wanted one and when Ida could no longer keep up with demand, they hired a few employees and the business was born. To this day, these hats are hand-stitched right in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, still made to fit perfectly.

Surely most of the American-based companies mentioned above, and dozens more, have equally fascinating histories. Perhaps it’s time to get the word out!

Billy Neville is an industry consultant and branding expert. He can be reached at 601-278-5155 or wnmnn3@yahoo.com.

Watching the London Olympics has put me in a Tweedy Mood….. Part 2

There are many images that come to one’s mind when thinking of England……. as a bird hunter I can’t get the country life and the Englishman’s love for his dogs out of my mind.

These are not Yappers; content with sitting on your lap and sleeping the day away. The Sporting dog is truly Man’s best friend, ready at a moment’s notice to take to the fields and woods…. and always there to greet you with a wagging tail when you arrive home!  There should be an Olympic Event for these great athletes!

Seersucker & Tweeds blog by American Suit Store

It’s 100 degrees Fahrenheit in Kansas City Today

CAN’T THINK OF A BETTER DAY TO TALK ABOUT HARRIS TWEED

A film of the history of Harris Tweed

 

For over 150 years Harris Tweed has been hand woven in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland. The iconic fabric has stood the test of time through variances of fashion by being itself; a durable, warm, colorful fabric that identifies the wearer as a man of good taste. A large part of its charm is that in this highly mechanized, technology laden age we live in, every Harris Tweed cloth is still woven by hand.

This season americansuitstore.com is offering a Harris Tweed sport coat in two colors; the classic black/white herringbone and a brown/olive herringbone. In the month of August you can pre-order your coat at the reduced price of $249.95. All our coats are manufactured by Hardwick Clothes, the oldest privately owned mens tailored clothing manufacturer in America.

Made in Tennessee since 1880

Check out americansuitstore.com for Early Bird prices on your next Harris Tweed sport coats.

Seersucker & Tweeds is a blog by americansuitstore.com

 

A Must Read Article from NYT on the State of Middle Class in America

An excellent article on the making of iphones and the impact on American jobs.

The iEconomy

How the U.S. Lost Out on iPhone Work

“Companies and other economists say that notion is naïve. Though Americans are among the most educated workers in the world, the nation has stopped training enough people in the mid-level skills that factories need, executives say.

To thrive, companies argue they need to move work where it can generate enough profits to keep paying for innovation. Doing otherwise risks losing even more American jobs over time, as evidenced by the legions of once-proud domestic manufacturers — including G.M. and others — that have shrunk as nimble competitors have emerged.” click to read article in its entirety.

 

Seersucker & Tweeds blog by American Suit Store

Harris Tweed – A Repeat

Back in June I posted a video called; Harris Tweed – A Romantic History. October is Harris Tweed month at American Suit Store and as a companion to our Special Sale I’m re-posting the video. In October only: Our Harris Tweed 2 button sport coat at $249.95. Regular price $285.

Seersucker & Tweeds blog by American Suit Store

 

Chuck the year round clothing – it’s time to wear the season

As we move into the latter part of August and stare into September and Fall, it occurred to us that now is the time to change the blog background from summer’s fabric of choice – seersucker – to a Fall classic. I choice a Scottish Tartan because it reflects my traditional roots and expresses the season the best. But this isn’t just any tartan — I chose the official California state tartan which honors the Scottish-born naturalist John Muir and was based on his family tartan.

In today’s Wall Street Journal there is a lead article about the return of thick, wooly clothing this Fall. Makers such as Burberry and Hickey-Freeman are showing the heavier, more seasonal clothing that is opposite of the year round clothing that has been the standard-bearer. The looks are in thicker English and Scottish tweeds & wools, seasonal clothing that, as the WSJ states, reflects menswear heritage.

http://online.wsj.com/article/F3534389-AADB-4079-8C22-B8400C77BEEF.html

Harris Tweed by American Suit Store

We say…. it’s about time! It’s time for men to break out of the same clothing they wore in April….or July. Its time to show what the season calls for – its time to reach into your menswear heritage!

Seersucker & Tweeds by American Suit Store

Fall Fashion Trends – Ivy Traditional

Nothing says Ivy more than Harris Tweed, the iconic hand woven wool fabrication of Scotland. And this is not your father’s Harris Tweed either, with the weight lightened for today’s controlled environments and warmer temperatures. But make no mistake, the look is as Ivy as Ivy gets. Think crisp fall Saturdays in the stadium, bow ties, pipes and a casual elegance that has been missing from fashion. This is a statement of who you are…..reflecting today’s casual looks when worn with khakis, cords or jeans, or dressing the coat up with a pair of wool charcoal twills.

 

To be certified as authentic Harris Tweed the fabric must be woven by hand on the islands of Outer Hebrides of Scotland.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

American Suit Store

St. Johns Bay Rum

No, don’t break out your rum and coke recipes.

The bottle above is a Men’s fragrance, not rum to drink.

For centuries the people of the Virgin Islands would crush leaves from bay trees and soak them in rum. The fragrant lotion that resulted from this process would then be rubbed in their scalp, and also to massage sore muscles and cool feverish bodies. Then in 1838, a Danish chemist discovered that by extracting the oil from bay leaves and mixing it with rum was a superior product made by the natives. This bay rum was so pure and fragrant that it won a gold medal at the Worlds Fair of 1876. The fragrance today captures the essence of the islands. St John’s Bay Rum is still made in St Johns Virgin Islands and continues to be hand-wrapped in palm fronds in a pattern used by St Bart’s fishermen called “fish pot weave”. It is my fragrance of choice.


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