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A gentleman in a smoking jacket smoking a cigarette (1930) The smoking jacket remained popular into the 20th century. An editorial in The Washington Post in 1902 wrote that the smoking jacket was "synonymous with comfort", [4] while a Pennsylvania newspaper opined in 1908 that it would be "putting it mildly to say that a new House Coat or ...
The company began as two separate leather apparel manufacturer-retailers: Berman Buckskin, founded in 1899, as Berman Brothers Fur, Wool and Hides founded by David, Ephraim and Alexander Berman, [3] and after World War II, reinvented as a fringed buckskin shirt and jacket retailer, [4] and Wilsons House of Suede, founded in late 1950 in Beverly Hills California by Jerry Wilson and known for ...
Cleo Trumbo, wife of novelist Dalton Trumbo, smokes with a holder during House Un-American Activities Committee hearings in 1947. A cigarette holder is a fashion accessory, a slender tube in which a cigarette is held for smoking.
The Beatle suit, inspired by Pierre Cardin's collarless jackets, derived from Edwardian suits and the Indian Nehru jacket. The Mod suit, a fashion of the 1960s, and again in the early 2010s. Characteristics include a very slim cut, narrow lapels, three or four buttons and a strongly tapered waist. Usually single-breasted and grey.
During the Victorian and Edwardian era, button boots with a single row of punching across the cap toe were worn along with a cane. On cold days, it was common to wear a frock overcoat , a type of overcoat cut exactly the same as the frock coat, with the waist seam construction only a little longer and fuller to permit it to be worn over the top ...
Thompson retired after the war as owner of the nightclubs and tobacco shops. [5] He started the new business as a mail order only business by placing an advertisement in Field & Stream, [7] and around 1951 handed it over to Peter Alport, his son-in-law. [5] [6] Alport was in advertising in New York City where he owned Parma Advertising. [5]