Sunday, 5 October 2014

2014-Tone: the Appeal of Ska Fashions Today


First of all: braces! It is a contentious issue, but the awesome among you will understand how cool braces are.
(Left) Reverse cover art for Ian Dury’s New Boots and Panties!! (Right) Skinheads in Piccadilly Circus

Second of all: a brief note on neo-fascism and the struggle for cultural tolerance… I don’t mean to get political on a fashion blog, but the styles of ska music have an important social history. I will give you an insight into this history as well as a flavour of ska music and culture. In the early 70s, the white working-class British youth shamelessly imitated the cool Kingston ‘rude-boy’ style of Desmond Decker and second generation Jamaicans and gave birth to ‘skinhead’ culture.

Dekker’s suited and booted look pre-empts the image of bands like The Specials 



























The staples of this style were checked button-down shirts and tailored tonic mohair suits, purchased at great expense, with short or turned up trousers, loafers, brogues, and the most enduring icons of the style: Doc Martins and braces. From this shared style emerged a brief moment of cultural harmony. But in one of recent history’s most hideous contradictions, skinheads aligned themselves with ultranationalist parties such as the National Front and violently turned on non-white cultures.

Shane Meadow’s This Is England dramatically depicts the corruption of youth by far right politics
It wasn’t until the end of the 70s that ska made a comeback from the most unlikely of places: Coventry. 2-tone was born out of anger towards the vitriol and racism on the streets of Britain. It united black and white musicians, in bands such as The Specials and Madness, to create music everyone could dance to, and the style that came with it was an attempt to rekindle the cultural harmony of the early 70s. Pauline Black of The Selector remarks of 2-tone’s famous checked pattern:

“Black and white check is quite iconic and what we were trying to portray is that black and white people could be in the same band and really get along together and make music together … That was a very potent thing for young people to see at that time.”*

 Pauline Black was at the forefront of piecing this style together using the power of the thrift shop. Here lies the true beauty of this style. Aside from its emphasis on cultural unity, a message that quite seriously needs voicing today, 2-tone style goes hand in hand with vintage culture; perhaps it even marks its beginnings.


2-tone introduced a number of other staples of the ska look: skinny black ties, the still-popular Harrington jacket, overcoats, pork pie hats and trilbies, and Wayfarer shades. You can see sly nods to this fashion on the highstreet today, but I encourage you to venture off the highstreet and find something absolutely skank-worthy.

In conclusion: braces!

Adapting the 2-tone look: with skinny rather than straight-cut jeans, an old burton overcoat and brogue boots. DMs and similar will make a sizeable hole in your wallet; Blighty Bazaar for one have some awesome second hand boots on their ground floor. A nice jacket could give this look a more rude boy or even dandyish feel. The braces were my dad's.

Photography: Angela Gui



* See BBC4 documentary, Oh You Pretty Things: The Story of Music and Fashionas part of the BBC’s Sound of Style season.

































































/ Frederick x

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