It’s not what you show it’s the way that you show it. Amen to that. Charnos lingerie is amongst my very favourite…
1970s
Inspirational Illustrations: Graff, Unmistakably
1970s, graff, harpers and queen, Illustrations, jewellery, Vintage AdvertsInspirational Images: Home Discomforts
1970s, christa peters, haute naffness, interior design, libby morris, nova magazineCurious Coincidences: Gucci vs. Ossie Clark
1970s, curious coincidences, gucci, ossie clarkCurious Coincidences: ASOS vs. Radley
1970s, asos, curious coincidences, radleyCurious Coincidences: Agent Provocateur vs. Rudi Gernreich
1970s, agent provocateur, curious coincidences, peggy moffitt, rudi gernreichVintage Adverts: Sex Sells….Chess?
1970s, haute naffness, ossie clark, Vintage AdvertsVintage Adverts: Very Diana Rigg, very Sanderson
1970s, diana rigg, sanderson, Vintage AdvertsThere are elements that I like here, but I can’t decide whether I prefer Diana’s pad or Britt’s groovier Sanderson-decked dining room. Someone’s just going to have to donate a large house to me, so I can decorate each room in a different style and make up my mind…
Lloyd Johnson – The Modern Outfitter
1970s, Eighties Fashion, johnson and johnson, kensington market, lloyd johnson, menswear, novelty printsMany thanks to Paul Gorman for the invite to the opening of the superb Lloyd Johnson exhibition at Chelsea Space on Tuesday night. True to my usual form, I found it mighty hard to take any half-decent photos amongst the crowds so I must apologise for the poor quality which lies herein. I’m also definitely planning to return on a quiet weekday, so I can absorb it all properly.
I must confess that menswear is not one of my great areas of expertise, but I do know what I like. And those early Johnson and Johnson printed shirts and jackets are incredibly covetable – I actually cannot resist a novelty print. I know Mr Brownwindsor fancied a few of them, and it is yet another reminder of the tragedy of how dull most modern menswear is. (Snuggling up in a sloppy ‘La Rocka’ jumper, seen below, would also be very desirable!)
The highlight of the exhibition is probably the original ‘Johnsons’ shop frontage from within Kensington Market. Such a hallowed place, formerly full of many of my favourite designers of the Seventies and Eighties, it’s remarkable to see something like that having survived!
For me, La Rocka was just one of those names (like Red or Dead and Joe Bloggs) which stuck in my head during my childhood but which had little contextual information. This exhibition is a terrific insight into one man’s journey through several different eras of street style in London, always managing to stay idiosyncratic but never stalling at the one style. And as someone the other night said to me, you can’t really be different if you look the same as everyone else.
The exhibition runs until the 3rd March, so make sure you make a trip!



















