Threading the Needle ~ Behold The Rules Of Ivy
Over a decade has passed since I transcribed “The Rules Of Ivy” while asserting my role as co-curator for the Ivy Style Exhibit at The Fashion Institute of Technology Museum, experienced by over 50,000 onsite spectators.
Setting forth the Rules of Ivy, G. Bruce Boyer, my ongoing Fashion History Mentor (English Literature Professor former Fashion Editor at Town and Country, Esquire, GQ) penned the Foreword to my book Threading The Needle. “In 2011, Patricia Mears, deputy director of the Museum at FIT, asked Richard Press and me to assist her in curating an exhibit on Ivy Style,” he recalled, “we both jumped at it.”
In a squib from my recently released book Threading The Needle II, Patricia updates her enthusiasm of the memorable event, “How lucky was I to have Richard, along with G. Bruce Boyer, be my Ivy Style partner and guide?”
An enclosed note from a time past recalls my forbearance for rules of the game. Four balls a walk, three strikes you’re out. Here’s a further take from chapter 42 in my new book titled The Lucky Seven Ivy Essentials reworked for the current column:
GREY SUIT: If you don’t regularly wear a suit, make it grey. Blue is too formal for daytime wear. Keep it geared up for board meetings, funerals, if you get elected to Congress or appear in court as defendant or counsel.
BLUE BLAZER: Sorry, the old standby. Fake suit with Grey Dress Trousers or Country Club Chic with Tartans, Khakis, White Ducks or for JG Melon’s ragged bone Jeans.
OXFORD-CLOTH BUTTON DOWN: Historical precedent—President Jack Kennedy at Hyannis Port in rolled up OCBD quarterbacking touch football with Brothers Bobby, Teddy similarly attired.
Include: loafers, dirty white bucks, khaki trousers, repp ties, Oxford cloth boxer shorts, Camel Hair Polo Coat, Shaggy Dog Shetland sweaters, Harris Tweed Sport Coat— the whole shebang undying good taste from Yesterday for Today and Tomorrow.
Seize the moment to get the full take of THREADING THE NEEDLE II @jpressonline
RICHARD PRESS
9 comments
Among his other talents, frequent contributor Robert Emmaus never avoids an honest appraisal of his journey to appropriate Ivy League dress. Witness his recent admission.of lacking an OCBD for oran appearance at a1962 S. A. T. date. I shared his lack of appropriate basic attire back in 1947. Growing up in a tiny Massachusetts town, my family kept me dressed in the latest W W 2 inventory of the local military surplus store. Not a single Ivy item in sight.
Fortunately, a year later found me as a freshman joining one of the 37 fraternities at Penn. Heavily populated by aspiring undergrads at the Wharton School, I found myself surrounded by a sea of blazers, button downs, repp ties, khakis and greying (once white) bucks. With the help of my understanding family (and the funds from dishwashing in the fraternity kitchen), I slowly began to acquire that special comfort of dressing like almost everyone on campus. The beginnings of feeling at home to this day in my ever appropriate 3 button, soft roll, pleatless wardrobe.
Yes, yes, yes!
Kind Regards,
H-U
Outstanding information as always Thank You !
My first encounter with the rules of ivy was the embarrassment I felt at the S.A.T. exam at Park School in Indianapolis in 1962 when I—-an accomplished public school scholar—was the only student wearing a white broadcloth dress shirt in a sea of blue OCBDs!