Clothes for Work

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High fashion has often flirted with workwear, gentrifying familiar occupational garments for fun or to shock. In 1988, the old-fashioned design store, Liberty & Co, off Regent Street in London's West End, launched a range of men's fashion coats which resembled the traditional black woollen donkey jackets beloved of construction workers. Customised with applied PVC yokes printed in a paisley William Morris pattern, instead of the orange PCV for visibility, they were retailed in London and in the regional stores in towns like Manchester. This example was bought by a young man living at Sale who saw the promotional photographs in Vogue, where the jackets were "modelled" by building workers in exaggerated poses (see below).

Liberty & Co opened their celebrated London store as early as 1875, selling an increasing stock of "artistic" and "exotic" products for interior design, such as carpets, ceramics and furniture, but also shawls and jewellery. Often imported directly from India, China or Japan, these objects helped to set a late nineteenth century style for all things eastern and "oriental". In the twentieth century, more emphasis has been placed on fabrics and embroideries, and sometimes on fashion.

Full item descriptions:

"coat & donkey jacket" [2000.5], Liberty & Co

Related Themes:

Men's Working Jackets