Or that gay men used various colored handkerchiefs to express their sexual preferences to others “in the know”? Or that some of our modern-day slang is directly derived from queer culture?
While originally designed as an accessible and rather fancy handkerchief ... With every conceivable pattern, color and style ...
The approach of the boat races calls to mind the interesting fact, not generally known among Harvard men of this generation ... The idea of brightly colored handkerchiefs occurring to them ...
Explore a range of the best pocket squares for men in India to ensure you have one for every suit you own, enhancing the ...
If you're like me, you grew up going to Jos. A. Bank with your father whenever you needed a new suit (say, for a wedding or ...
One fine day I climbed with my friend Frankenberg the famous steeple of Wahlstatt by means of the lightning conductor and tied my handkerchief ... at the country. The men looked ridiculously ...
He hasn’t counted, but he estimates he owns at least 500 suits from Cuevas, Cohn or fellow western wear designer Jaime ...
when there was an entire sartorial code for gay men, according to which not only different-coloured handkerchiefs, but also everyday garments like Converse and plaid shirts all meant different ...
held the bloody handkerchief aloft, as if it were the symbol of the horrors he foretold. To such a point, in those simple old days, could campaign falsehood madden able and good men! The orthodox ...
His father, visiting for the first time in two years, pulls out a white handkerchief ... with what he lost one night when he was six. Four men with machetes hacked off most of his left arm ...
White men and colored men, veterans and recruits and ... He wore on his sombrero a blue polka-dot handkerchief, a la Havelock, which, as he advanced, floated out straight behind his head, like ...