![]() These smells, they fight for air as people flit back and forth in small work stations, moving through tasks with the grace and ease of highly skilled dancers. It smells of stale solvents of tannery leathers oiled thick as an outfielder’s glove in mid-September of raw canvas so heavy and fibrous that filaments cling to the insides of my nostrils. Bean’s factory in Brunswick, Maine feels exactly like it should. The post has a bunch of stories and fantastic photos, but here's their introduction. A couple years ago, the guys from All Plaid Out and A Restless Transplant visited the factory in Brunswick, ME (the same factory that makes the LL Bean boat & totes). And while I may not be following my father's academic and professional footsteps, you can bet I'll be wearing the same shoes.īean boots have always been sewn in Maine by LL Bean employees - they aren't contracted out to third parties, and construction has never been outsourced to foreign countries. It has been, after all, a consistent component of the man I look up to the most. ![]() Naturally, I've grown to admire the Bean boot. They're the first and only shoes he puts on before he steps outdoors. He puts them on when it's cold, when it's muddy, or when it snows (conditions which, for anyone not familiar with Buffalo NY, reflect about 8 months of the year!) But they are his boots. If I had to guess, I'd say I've given them more thought than he has. My dad has been wearing Bean boots for at least as long as I've been alive. This story (from a now-defunct blog called Wingtip) is my favorite. He asked other menswear bloggers to write and post pictures of their experiences with the boots, and lots of them responded. In 2010, Lawrence Schlossman (Sartorially Inclined, and How to Talk to Girls at Parties) started a series of guests posts called The Bean Boot Project. However, I think the more interesting history comes from many people's deep connection to the boots, which look almost identical to the ones their families have been buying for generations). In 2009, when LL Bean re-hired Alex Carleton (a former LL Bean designer who had left to found Rogue's Gallery) to design the new Signature line, he started with a Bean boot. We guarantee them to give perfect satisfaction in every way."īy the 1980s, the boots were iconic enough (with a certain demographic) that Lisa Birnbach made them a centerpiece of the tongue-in-cheek Official Preppy Handbook - see here and here, for example. The Maine Hunting Shoe is designed by a hunter who has tramped the Maine woods for the last 18 years. In 1912, he obtained a mailing list of nonresident Maine hunting license holders and prepared a three-page flyer that boldly proclaimed, "You cannot expect success hunting deer or moose if your feet are not properly dressed. began his business by working out of the basement of his brother's apparel shop. enlisted a local cobbler to stitch leather uppers to workmen's rubber boots, creating a comfortable, functional boot for exploring the Maine woods. In 1911, an avid outdoorsman named Leon Leonwood Bean returned from a hunting trip with cold, damp feet and a revolutionary idea. The Bangor Daily News gives one take on the history here, and here's another from Gizmodo. The origins of the Bean boot are essentially the origins of the company. I don't know - maybe you have to have grown up in a place where everyone wore them. They aren't sleek, and when you wear them, they really stand out. I realize these aren't everyone's cup of tea, but for me, the attraction is a direct function of their utility. Since their deep roots in American menswear is part of the reason I love Bean Boots, I wanted to start there (Section I below) I also put together an overview of options and a buying guide (Section II). This is an update and extension to a guide I put together last fall, and as always, suggestions, revisions and corrections are welcome! Love 'em or hate 'em, we're solidly into Bean Boot season in most of the US. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |