-40%

Alexander Shields I. Magnin Orange Linen Tie EUC VTG Ivy Mod 1950s 1960s 1

$ 26.39

Availability: 47 in stock
  • Refund will be given as: Money back or replacement (buyer's choice)
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Material: Linen
  • Pattern: Solid
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Length: Short (< 57 in.)
  • Attachment: Tied
  • Width: Skinny
  • Brand: Alexander Shields
  • Style: Tie
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Fabric Type: Woven
  • Color: Orange
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Decade: 1950s
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Modified Item: No
  • Look: Mod/GoGo
  • MPN: Does Not Apply

    Description

    Length: 55.5”
    Width: 2.25”
    A square-end tie from midcentury designer Alexander Shields that might just add some unique and needed flavor to your wardrobe: a summery linen tie dyed a most luminous shade of yellowish-orange, akin to saffron or turmeric, one not typically seen in the realm of menswear. As I wrote for my other turmeric-colored I.Magnin necktie, an appreciation for dress and cuisine might have more in common than expected—if you embrace one, why not embrace both? 100% linen, designed and made by Alexander Shields and retailed through I. Magnin, the former San Francisco high-end department store, c.1950s/1960s. Immaculate vintage condition.
    “Originality is their trademark.” Had you been at 58th Street and Park Avenue in the 1950s and 1960s, you might have peered into the shop of Alexander McMillan Shields (1916-2010), an influential designer of his day, but today a largely obscure figure. Together with his wife “Sandy” (actress Aina Constant, 1913-2009), he produced outfits that brought simplicity of design, trim silhouettes, and modern comfort into menswear while expanding the range of colors available to the male consumer. After having spent much of his adolescence (and later military service) at sea, he forwent a diplomatic career in favor of devoting himself to modernizing men’s fashion—some of his innovations failed to endure (buttonless suits, short “dinky” jackets, “Americanized” yukata), yet others, such as tartan dinner jackets and use of performance fabrics, have endured. In regard to neckwear, Shields’s trademark was square-end tie, usually of fine Swiss silk, and always stunning in their use of color.