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Why does the London fashion pack ignore northern style? Why does the London fashion pack ignore northern style?
(2 months later)
It started with beanie hats. Or rather, it started with a column in the fashion section of The Times about beanie hats late last year. A column that typified everything that's wrong about style journalism in the UK.It started with beanie hats. Or rather, it started with a column in the fashion section of The Times about beanie hats late last year. A column that typified everything that's wrong about style journalism in the UK.
The gist of the story was that the writer had noticed with the onslaught of the cold weather, men had started to wear beanie hats. This was backed up by pictures of young chaps in said hats mugging for the camera in a satisfyingly urban location in London. A nothing piece.The gist of the story was that the writer had noticed with the onslaught of the cold weather, men had started to wear beanie hats. This was backed up by pictures of young chaps in said hats mugging for the camera in a satisfyingly urban location in London. A nothing piece.
But the story infuriated me – not because I particularly dislike beanies – but because it completely ignored that the real winter hat of the moment was not the beanie, but the bobble, worn by 'himalayan scallies' and 'heritage' types the country over for the last two years. Anyone with an interest in men's fashion would have noticed this.But the story infuriated me – not because I particularly dislike beanies – but because it completely ignored that the real winter hat of the moment was not the beanie, but the bobble, worn by 'himalayan scallies' and 'heritage' types the country over for the last two years. Anyone with an interest in men's fashion would have noticed this.
It may only have been a small piece but it symbolised how uninformed mainstream fashion scribes are – and always have been – about street style outside London. If this writer, the paper's fashion editor no less, had even bothered to leave the chummy, mwah-mwah capsule of the capital then she'd have witnessed disparate men's fashion scenes flourishing all over the country. And, probably, the odd bobble hat.It may only have been a small piece but it symbolised how uninformed mainstream fashion scribes are – and always have been – about street style outside London. If this writer, the paper's fashion editor no less, had even bothered to leave the chummy, mwah-mwah capsule of the capital then she'd have witnessed disparate men's fashion scenes flourishing all over the country. And, probably, the odd bobble hat.
From End Clothing in Newcastle to Eleven in Sunderland, Oi Polloi in Manchester and Weavers Door in Liverpool – British menswear has undergone a revolution in the last few years with a look coalescing around workwear, preppy, mod, casual and extreme weatherwear. And it's been ignored in favour of fawning pieces on designers whose clothes we'll never wear and whose reference points mean nothing to us.From End Clothing in Newcastle to Eleven in Sunderland, Oi Polloi in Manchester and Weavers Door in Liverpool – British menswear has undergone a revolution in the last few years with a look coalescing around workwear, preppy, mod, casual and extreme weatherwear. And it's been ignored in favour of fawning pieces on designers whose clothes we'll never wear and whose reference points mean nothing to us.
Great Britain is not a big country – a trip to Manchester or Liverpool takes two hours from London, while another hour will get you to Leeds or Newcastle. But if you're writing about men's fashion it might as well be the size of Brazil, such is the coverage these cities receive. It's no coincidence that the London press completely missed the advent of what would become 'casual' in the late 1970s and Madchester ten years later. If it wasn't in Soho, it wasn't happening.Great Britain is not a big country – a trip to Manchester or Liverpool takes two hours from London, while another hour will get you to Leeds or Newcastle. But if you're writing about men's fashion it might as well be the size of Brazil, such is the coverage these cities receive. It's no coincidence that the London press completely missed the advent of what would become 'casual' in the late 1970s and Madchester ten years later. If it wasn't in Soho, it wasn't happening.
A couple of year's back, The Sunday Times Style magazine devoted a whole issue to "the new style tribes", a mish-mash of imagined whoppers and whopperettes living some privileged Performance-like existence in Westbourne Grove where beautiful rastas share their weed with Jemima and her oh-so-bohemian pals.A couple of year's back, The Sunday Times Style magazine devoted a whole issue to "the new style tribes", a mish-mash of imagined whoppers and whopperettes living some privileged Performance-like existence in Westbourne Grove where beautiful rastas share their weed with Jemima and her oh-so-bohemian pals.
And they got away with it. They got away with it when British menswear blogs like Oneupmanship were charting the rise of workwear and the frenetic trading in brands like Façonnable on ebay. They got away with it as young men in their late teens and early-20s tried to relive the casual era of their fathers by buying T-shirts that referenced the period in their tens of thousands. They got away with it, because those who knew what was really happening had no way of contradicting those who didn't.And they got away with it. They got away with it when British menswear blogs like Oneupmanship were charting the rise of workwear and the frenetic trading in brands like Façonnable on ebay. They got away with it as young men in their late teens and early-20s tried to relive the casual era of their fathers by buying T-shirts that referenced the period in their tens of thousands. They got away with it, because those who knew what was really happening had no way of contradicting those who didn't.
This isn't a rant about or against London by the way. Umbrella, the fashion magazine I edit, is based in the city, and we consider it to be one of the greatest places on earth. The anger comes the laziness of the capital's lifestyle journalists and the fact that actually finding stories comes a poor second to getting free clothes and going to parties you're not invited to.This isn't a rant about or against London by the way. Umbrella, the fashion magazine I edit, is based in the city, and we consider it to be one of the greatest places on earth. The anger comes the laziness of the capital's lifestyle journalists and the fact that actually finding stories comes a poor second to getting free clothes and going to parties you're not invited to.
As journalism becomes increasingly badly paid and jobs only open up to those who can afford to work for free for years on end, the gap between the style press and regular men who have a real interest in fashion will just get wider and wider.As journalism becomes increasingly badly paid and jobs only open up to those who can afford to work for free for years on end, the gap between the style press and regular men who have a real interest in fashion will just get wider and wider.
They're not pulling the wool over anyone's eyes.They're not pulling the wool over anyone's eyes.
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Anthony Teasdale is the editor and co-publisher of men's online quarterly magazine, Umbrella. This post originally appeared on his blog, Bloke and Coke.
He also makes apps and works on branding/digital strategies for the likes of Virgin Media, Mazda and various other brands. Plus he writes on fashion, men's issues and social trends for the likes of Mr Porter, FHM and Grazia. He is from Aughton, in between Ormskirk and Maghull.
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Anthony Teasdale is the editor and co-publisher of men's online quarterly magazine, Umbrella. This post originally appeared on his blog, Bloke and Coke.
He also makes apps and works on branding/digital strategies for the likes of Virgin Media, Mazda and various other brands. Plus he writes on fashion, men's issues and social trends for the likes of Mr Porter, FHM and Grazia. He is from Aughton, in between Ormskirk and Maghull.
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