
I suppose this is a Nehru jacket? Here is an advert from ’35.

Is anyone buying?
Cheers
M Alden
Military tunics are worn with what is known as a patrol collar, it fits under the tunic's own.couch wrote: ↑Fri Aug 28, 2009 4:06 amLet me put this as a question: what if any is the difference in style or effect, in your views, between PMoK's and Lord Louis's standing collars, under which no collared shirt is worn (and which in PMoK's case is noticeably not snug against his neck) and those of Toscanini, Nehru, and all the '60s Nehru-jacket wearers who wore either banded shirts or turtlenecks visibly under their standing-collar jackets?
the Nehru jacket as well as the Mao jacket are to my understanding “copies” of the Austrian Steireranzug which was invented n around 1850 by the brother of the Austrian emperor Erzherzog Johan. that might be the reason also why Waltz wears such a jacket as an Austrian, even in the Bond Movie . the Steueranzug is the MOST iconic Suit from Austrian – nearly any men has one- at least in country side . There are so many mights about this suits – it was invented as a union dress code for farmers and and it still has such opposition meaning in Vienna where you maybe can not see it .
Regards from Graz / Austria
Noble Savage wrote: ↑Mon Dec 27, 2021 8:45 pmMilitary tunics are worn with what is known as a patrol collar, it fits under the tunic's own.couch wrote: ↑Fri Aug 28, 2009 4:06 amLet me put this as a question: what if any is the difference in style or effect, in your views, between PMoK's and Lord Louis's standing collars, under which no collared shirt is worn (and which in PMoK's case is noticeably not snug against his neck) and those of Toscanini, Nehru, and all the '60s Nehru-jacket wearers who wore either banded shirts or turtlenecks visibly under their standing-collar jackets?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests