leonoreband.com
RSS

The Other Polo Shirt: The Story of the Button-Down Collar – Habilitate

maximios October 1, 2023 Fashion

Image is my own / All rights reserved

Often the most aesthetically pleasing details in clothes are born from practical considerations and the button-down collar ranks among the best of these. 

Its invention dates back to the turn of the twentieth century with a visit to England by an American named John Brooks (yes, that Brooks — he was the grandson of Henry Brooks, founder of America’s older clothier). During his visit, he took in a polo game and was fascinated by the shirts the players wore. While otherwise adhering perfectly to the strict formal dress codes of the day, riders did allow one small but eye-catching concession to practicality while in the saddle: their collars were all buttoned down to prevent them from flying up into their faces during play. Brooks, a man with an eye for details who equally knew a business opportunity when he saw one, promptly bought several of the shirts in question and shipped them back to America with the instruction that Brooks Brothers start putting buttoned-down collars in their line. To this day, their button-downs are called ‘polo shirts’.

Image credit: Frankenmedia / CC BY 2.0

For many, Brooks Brothers’ polo shirt remains the button-down gold standard, though its success has meant that for decades just about every shirtmaker has had its own version. The original was traditionally made in white or blue Oxford cloth, although pink, yellow and a variety of striped patterns have long been popular too. The eponymous collar — the minutest details and proportions of which are a cause célèbre among menswear obsessive — clocks in at precisely three-and-three-eighth inches, while the arms end in straightforward barrel cuffs.

Image credits: Tradlands / CC BY 2.0; The Library of Congress / No known copyright restrictions; Florida Memory / No known copyright restrictions

Throughout its lifetime, the button-down shirt has had a wide range of associations, being viewed at various points as edgy, sexy, or conservative. What has remained relatively constant, however, is its popularity. It was a huge success for Brooks Brothers from when it first went on sale around 1900 and remains one of their best-selling items to this day. 

When it first arrived, the button-down’s soft, attached collar symbolised youth and vitality at a time when stiff, starchy, detached collars were still doing the rounds. Its newfound comfort and practicality heralded a more casual approach to dressing in America, with fashionable types like F. Scott Fitzgerald being among the early adopters. 

F. Scott Fitzgerald
Image credit: Carl Van Vetchen / No known copyright restrictions

Considered a positively bohemian look at the time, it’s little surprise that the shirt would find its natural home among college students. Beginning in the years leading up to the Second World War, the button-down became one of the cornerstones of collegiate style in America, as much a prep staple as is khakis or penny loafers. 

The preppy look has long been associated with the Ivy League, and Brooks Brothers itself has a long-standing association with cultural elites (Winthrop Brooks, for example, the president of the company from 1935-45, was a member of the famed Yale singing society known as the Whiffenpoofs). It naturally followed that the collar most associated with the likes of Elis and Brooks men would come to connote the more conservative and well-to-do. In Mary McCarthy’s ‘The Man in the Brooks Brothers Shirt’, for instance, the eponymous character’s identifying garment acts as a symbol of his old-world conservatism in contrast to the young narrator’s radical beliefs. 

Clark Gable wearing his signature shirt
Image credit: Wikimedia Commons / Public domain

As in so much of classic menswear, however, Hollywood added its own flavour to the mix. The famous scene in It Happened One Night (1934) where Clark Gable takes off his shirt to reveal a — *gasp* — bare chest famously caused the sale of undershirts to drop overnight. It also did wonders for the popularity of the very button-down he’d been wearing moments before. Gable was a fan of the shirt off-screen as well and wore it his entire life, giving a priceless bit of free advertising to Brooks Brothers along the way. 

Frank Sinatra, Cary Grant, and Gianni Agnelli in button-downs
Image credit: Wikimedia Commons / Public domain; Kate Gabrielle / CC BY 2.0; Gorupdebesanez / CC BY-SA 3.0

Other silver-screen stars who liked a button-down include Fred Astaire, Cary Grant, and Frank Sinatra. Elsewhere in American culture, it was a favourite of President John F. Kennedy, Miles Davis, Chet Baker (who wore his with short sleeves), and Andy Warhol (who preferred his in white). In the rest of the world, it was a hit among British mods and skinheads, and, of course, with the famed Italian industrialist and menswear icon, Gianni Agnelli. Ever the style pioneer, Agnelli was the first to leave the points of his collar roguishly unbuttoned, a look that’s still popular among more adventurous dressers looking for a button-down look that isn’t quite so…buttoned down.

* This post may contain affiliate links. If you buy something using them, we get a small percentage of the sale at no cost to you. More info at our affiliate policy.

Celluloid Style: Orson Welles – Habilitate Posts About footwear – Habilitate

Related Posts

Fashion

Habilitate – A menswear blog about the stories your wardrobe has to tell. In-depth features on clothing items, notable brands and fashion miscellanea.

A guide to the best shops to buy men’s clothing in Scotland’s capital city. Levi’s are celebrating their 150th anniversary this week. Here’s how they conquered to global denim market. For my money, Jubilee watch bands are the most versatile bracelets around. The brilliant Bienluienapris tells me all about tailoring, watches, travel, music, and more. […]

Fashion

Plimsolls for Prim Soles: A History of Canvas Shoes – Habilitate

Image credit: Mpumelelo Macu on Unsplash Sneakers today are among the most colourful, elaborate, and extravagant things people put on their bodies. If contemporary fashion were fauna, trainers have evolved to be the eye-catching birds of paradise. This highly specialised evolution is all the more remarkable when you consider just how sedate their origins are. […]

Fashion

Posts About italian – Habilitate

If you like the look of a clasp-closure coat, you can’t go wrong with the classic Fay 4 Ganci hook jacket. I’ve never had much luck reading Italo Calvino’s books, but I’ve always liked looking at his clothes. Over and above his industrial legacy, tremendous wealth, and playboy lifestyle, Gianni Agnelli had a singular sense […]

Recent Posts

  • Habilitate – A menswear blog about the stories your wardrobe has to tell. In-depth features on clothing items, notable brands and fashion miscellanea.
  • Plimsolls for Prim Soles: A History of Canvas Shoes – Habilitate
  • Bibliophile Style: Jack Kerouac – Habilitate
  • Posts About Materials – Habilitate
  • Posts About Items – Habilitate

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • September 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • August 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • January 2022

Categories

  • Fashion
© leonoreband.com 2025
Powered by WordPress • Themify WordPress Themes