Sunday, January 29, 2012

James Bond's wardrobe and how it has changed

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Ian Fleming's original James Bond was a man who shared a particularly similar, although not actual in all ways dress sense to his creator. If you scanned the James Bond novels, in London he usually wears navy suits with white or blue shirts, which can on occasion be silk or Sea Island cotton. Added to this he wears a black knitted silk tie and slip on shoes. If he visits the gold course he may dress more casually, but that suggests a hound tooth suit and black windcheater, not something to ever see the light in the city.

In the evening he wears a dinner jacket with heavy silk shirt and while on assignment is sometimes dressed likewise, depending on what the job comprises. Even in the tropics he wears a light-weight navy suit, his compromise to the heat being replacing of the slip on shoes with sandals.

Naturally, he may hit the beach or spend a while poolside; or might be called on to visit the lair of some malignant plotting villain, in which particular case inexpensive black jeans and shirt will serve. And even in the relief of his very own hotel room he'll wear a short-sleeved shirt with trousers.

But the films have created a totally different character from the one imagined by Fleming and his dress sense and clothing are absolutely different too. While Sean Connery's Bond definitely did wear black knitted silk ties at some particular point, his suits have often been gray. However , that is really a tiny point compared with some of the largest atrocities committed by James Bond in the name of fashion (if you can forgive Connery his baby blue towelling monstrosity in Goldfinger and his pink tie in Diamonds Are Forever - Ian Fleming would surely have turned in his grave).

The movies of the Roger Moore era were doubtless the most current at the time. But his over enormous collars and massive flares are the most dated of any of the films and are often close to stupid. Other fashion faux pas in this age include him wearing a white vest underneath a denim suit in Live And Let Die, though he does just about get away with the safari suits.

While Pierce Brosnan's Bond seemed to always be in a suit, Daniel Craig's Bond is far more casual. See his extravagantly patterned shirt in Casino Royale as an example. And in Quantum of Solace he spends lots of the time in jeans and a Harrington jacket. With Tom Ford on board again for Skyfall, due later in 2012, you should expect more of the same.




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