The trench: A coat for all seasons
That the trench
coat, one of Britain’s most enduring clothing icons, is intrinsically
linked to the rain makes pure sartorial sense. What remains intriguing,
however, is the sliding scale of eclectic associations that the garment
has accumulated over time.
There is its neutral role as a smart,
double-breasted, weather-resistant staple for businessmen; its powerful
silver-screen status as the uniform of sly film noir gangsters and
wisecracking detectives; and then, of course, its pervy side. Add a pair
of stilettos and the belted, buttoned up trench becomes erotically
charged, suggesting − just like the kilt – an underlying state of
undress. While, in more negative terms, the poor old trench will never
be able to shake off its reputation as the go-to uniform for flashers.
Heritage
British trench coat brand Burberry, which over the past 13 years has
climbed to powerhouse status under chief creative officer − and soon to
be chief executive officer − Christopher Bailey, certainly played up the
sexy side of the garment in the recent campaign for its Burberry Body
fragrance. It featured a reclining Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, totally
nude but for a strategically-positioned, open trench coat, recalling
Helmut Newton’s iconic images of trench coat- and high heel-clad models
from the 1970s.
The trench coat’s name recalls its utilitarian
roots as a modern, highly-functional, lightweight garment developed for
British officers during World War I to help protect them from the
elements on the front line. Two brands hold claim to its invention:
Aquascutum, whose trench coats went on to be adopted by Winston
Churchill, Cary Grant, Lauren Bacall, Michael Caine and Peter Sellers
for his role as Inspector Clouseau in the Pink Panther series; and the
aforementioned Burberry, whose celebrity coups range from putting
Humphrey Bogart and Audrey Hepburn in their coats (for Casablanca and
Breakfast at Tiffany’s respectively), and, decades later, tapping
fashion royalty schoolboy Romeo Beckham for a campaign.
Aquascutum,
whose trench coats for WWI officers featured removable, buttoned-in
linings, had been outfitting officers in raincoats made from waterproof
cotton since the mid-19th Century. The house’s founder, John Emary
patented the first water-repellent cloth in 1853; the brand’s name comes
from the Latin words for water and shield. Certain trench coat
aficionados trace the oldest likely trench coat in existence to an 1851
grey showerproof Aquascutum coat worn by Lt Gen Gerald Goodlake during
the Crimean war. The garment is said to be preserved at Newstead Abbey
in England.
Thomas Burberry patented his own water-repellent
fabric, gabardine, a tightly woven twill weave, in 1879. He was
reportedly inspired by the weatherproof linen smocks worn by English
shepherds and farmers and designed what the fashion house that bears his
name claims was the predecessor to the trench, the Tielocken coat
(nicknamed ‘the Burberry’), in 1912. “‘A veritable suit of mail’ is how
one magazine would describe the gabardine coat,” reads an entry in
online fashion resource, Voguepedia.
“Maharajas and country doctors alike adored the all-purpose,
all-weather garment. ‘Fetch me my Burberry,’ King Edward VII would
instruct his valet.”
The classic double-breasted trench coat truly
took shape when its shoulder straps (for the attachment of epaulettes
or other rank insignia) and D-rings (for holding equipment, such as
maps) were added to meet new combat requirements for WWI. Other key
features of the coat included ten buttons on the front, waist and wrist
belts, wide lapels, a gun flap and raglan sleeves. Its original colour
was khaki.
Return of the mac
Another term
often used for the trench coat − the mac − points to another strong link
to its origins, however, with many attributing its inspiration to
Charles Macintosh, a Scottish chemist and inventor of waterproof fabrics
who in the 1820s invented the single-breasted, long rubberised raincoat
that reportedly influenced Emary and Burberry. The coat was later
referred to as the Macintosh, and eventually the Mackintosh, with a
‘k’. Macintosh collaborated with British inventor Thomas Hancock,
founder of the British rubber industry, who in 1843 took out a patent
for the vulcanisation of rubber using sulphur, producing a material
still used in raincoats and footwear − such as Converse sneakers −
today.
The classic double-breasted military-chic trench coat is
said to have infiltrated civilian wardrobes following the war, when
surplus stock was handed out by the government. Adopted by the
well-to-do hunting set and gents in the city, they rapidly became a
fashion and film fixture, sported by dashing protagonists of the film
noir genre in the 1940s, mainly accessorised with a wide ribbon fedora
and a cigarette dangling from the mouth. The look was to resurface in
the French New Wave films of the 1960s, such as Le Cercle Rouge
and Le Samourai starring Alain Delon, and Le Doulos starring Jean-Paul
Belmondo. Other trench-clad heroes include Michael Caine as hardman Jack
Carter in the 1971 gangster film Get Carter and Harrison Ford as bounty
hunter Rick Deckard in Blade Runner (1982).
A string of leading
ladies also embraced the trench coat’s photogenic, architectural lines,
including Greta Garbo, and Marlene Dietrich, paving the way for
generations of androgynous-chic icons to come, including Audrey Hepburn,
Charlotte Rampling and Charlotte Gainsbourg.
A stalwart of the
runways, with myriad deconstructed interpretations rolling out season
after season, the trench coat undoubtedly has stood the test of time
because of its defining features. Yet just as the coat, with its
high-tech materials, was revolutionary in its day, offering a modern
alternative to the cumbersome greatcoats of yore, it’s important to keep
innovating.
Trench warfare
The fate of the
two main competing trench coat brands lies in the need to move with the
times. Burberry has been transformed by Christopher Bailey and CEOs
Rose Marie Bravo and Angela Ahrendts into a multi-billion dollar player,
and its meteoric success depends on leveraging the brand’s heritage –
it maintains a 'Made in Britain' policy for the manufacture of its
trenches – while injecting a new vision. Customers can choose between
Heritage and Runway versions, from classic styles in English-woven
gabardine or reinterpretations using innovative fabrics like an oxblood
velvet-finish vinyl for men or calfskin, screen-printed with black
hearts for women.
Not to mention the house’s ambitious social
media and marketing strategies, such as the live-streaming of shows and
recruitment of a string of hip British muses, from Emma Watson to Tara
(son of Bryan) Ferry. Launched in 2009, the brand’s popular blog, Art of
the Trench, billed as a “living document of the trench coat,” features
series by established image makers, as well as submitted photos, showing
members of the public modelling Burberry trench coats. The site is said
to have helped fuel the brand’s Facebook fanbase to more than 1m in its
first year.
As Burberry’s sales have rocketed over the past
decade, Aquascutum’s have nose-dived. The brand was bailed out by
current owner YGM Trading but remains under the radar. While its trench
coat designs have stayed watertight, the brand is not impervious to the
rapid changes of fashion. The lesson? New materials, new colours and new
accessories must always be sought in order to keep this handsome design
icon in the limelight. The trench coat will always cope with the
weather in the streets, but must adapt to the shifting expectations of
the international catwalk too.
If you would like to comment on this story or anything else you have seen on BBC Culture, head over to our Facebook page or message us on Twitter.
It's one of Britain's enduring cultural icons - beloved by flashers, film stars and fashionistas alike.
BBC Culture salutes the trench coat:
http://www.bbc.com/culture/ story/ 20131024-the-trench-coat-for-al l-seasons
The trench: A coat for all seasons
That the trench
coat, one of Britain’s most enduring clothing icons, is intrinsically
linked to the rain makes pure sartorial sense. What remains intriguing,
however, is the sliding scale of eclectic associations that the garment
has accumulated over time.
There is its neutral role as a smart, double-breasted, weather-resistant staple for businessmen; its powerful silver-screen status as the uniform of sly film noir gangsters and wisecracking detectives; and then, of course, its pervy side. Add a pair of stilettos and the belted, buttoned up trench becomes erotically charged, suggesting − just like the kilt – an underlying state of undress. While, in more negative terms, the poor old trench will never be able to shake off its reputation as the go-to uniform for flashers.
Heritage British trench coat brand Burberry, which over the past 13 years has climbed to powerhouse status under chief creative officer − and soon to be chief executive officer − Christopher Bailey, certainly played up the sexy side of the garment in the recent campaign for its Burberry Body fragrance. It featured a reclining Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, totally nude but for a strategically-positioned, open trench coat, recalling Helmut Newton’s iconic images of trench coat- and high heel-clad models from the 1970s.
The trench coat’s name recalls its utilitarian roots as a modern, highly-functional, lightweight garment developed for British officers during World War I to help protect them from the elements on the front line. Two brands hold claim to its invention: Aquascutum, whose trench coats went on to be adopted by Winston Churchill, Cary Grant, Lauren Bacall, Michael Caine and Peter Sellers for his role as Inspector Clouseau in the Pink Panther series; and the aforementioned Burberry, whose celebrity coups range from putting Humphrey Bogart and Audrey Hepburn in their coats (for Casablanca and Breakfast at Tiffany’s respectively), and, decades later, tapping fashion royalty schoolboy Romeo Beckham for a campaign.
Aquascutum, whose trench coats for WWI officers featured removable, buttoned-in linings, had been outfitting officers in raincoats made from waterproof cotton since the mid-19th Century. The house’s founder, John Emary patented the first water-repellent cloth in 1853; the brand’s name comes from the Latin words for water and shield. Certain trench coat aficionados trace the oldest likely trench coat in existence to an 1851 grey showerproof Aquascutum coat worn by Lt Gen Gerald Goodlake during the Crimean war. The garment is said to be preserved at Newstead Abbey in England.
Thomas Burberry patented his own water-repellent fabric, gabardine, a tightly woven twill weave, in 1879. He was reportedly inspired by the weatherproof linen smocks worn by English shepherds and farmers and designed what the fashion house that bears his name claims was the predecessor to the trench, the Tielocken coat (nicknamed ‘the Burberry’), in 1912. “‘A veritable suit of mail’ is how one magazine would describe the gabardine coat,” reads an entry in online fashion resource, Voguepedia. “Maharajas and country doctors alike adored the all-purpose, all-weather garment. ‘Fetch me my Burberry,’ King Edward VII would instruct his valet.”
The classic double-breasted trench coat truly took shape when its shoulder straps (for the attachment of epaulettes or other rank insignia) and D-rings (for holding equipment, such as maps) were added to meet new combat requirements for WWI. Other key features of the coat included ten buttons on the front, waist and wrist belts, wide lapels, a gun flap and raglan sleeves. Its original colour was khaki.
Return of the mac
Another term often used for the trench coat − the mac − points to another strong link to its origins, however, with many attributing its inspiration to Charles Macintosh, a Scottish chemist and inventor of waterproof fabrics who in the 1820s invented the single-breasted, long rubberised raincoat that reportedly influenced Emary and Burberry. The coat was later referred to as the Macintosh, and eventually the Mackintosh, with a ‘k’. Macintosh collaborated with British inventor Thomas Hancock, founder of the British rubber industry, who in 1843 took out a patent for the vulcanisation of rubber using sulphur, producing a material still used in raincoats and footwear − such as Converse sneakers − today.
The classic double-breasted military-chic trench coat is said to have infiltrated civilian wardrobes following the war, when surplus stock was handed out by the government. Adopted by the well-to-do hunting set and gents in the city, they rapidly became a fashion and film fixture, sported by dashing protagonists of the film noir genre in the 1940s, mainly accessorised with a wide ribbon fedora and a cigarette dangling from the mouth. The look was to resurface in the French New Wave films of the 1960s, such as Le Cercle Rouge and Le Samourai starring Alain Delon, and Le Doulos starring Jean-Paul Belmondo. Other trench-clad heroes include Michael Caine as hardman Jack Carter in the 1971 gangster film Get Carter and Harrison Ford as bounty hunter Rick Deckard in Blade Runner (1982).
A string of leading ladies also embraced the trench coat’s photogenic, architectural lines, including Greta Garbo, and Marlene Dietrich, paving the way for generations of androgynous-chic icons to come, including Audrey Hepburn, Charlotte Rampling and Charlotte Gainsbourg.
A stalwart of the runways, with myriad deconstructed interpretations rolling out season after season, the trench coat undoubtedly has stood the test of time because of its defining features. Yet just as the coat, with its high-tech materials, was revolutionary in its day, offering a modern alternative to the cumbersome greatcoats of yore, it’s important to keep innovating.
Trench warfare
The fate of the two main competing trench coat brands lies in the need to move with the times. Burberry has been transformed by Christopher Bailey and CEOs Rose Marie Bravo and Angela Ahrendts into a multi-billion dollar player, and its meteoric success depends on leveraging the brand’s heritage – it maintains a 'Made in Britain' policy for the manufacture of its trenches – while injecting a new vision. Customers can choose between Heritage and Runway versions, from classic styles in English-woven gabardine or reinterpretations using innovative fabrics like an oxblood velvet-finish vinyl for men or calfskin, screen-printed with black hearts for women.
Not to mention the house’s ambitious social media and marketing strategies, such as the live-streaming of shows and recruitment of a string of hip British muses, from Emma Watson to Tara (son of Bryan) Ferry. Launched in 2009, the brand’s popular blog, Art of the Trench, billed as a “living document of the trench coat,” features series by established image makers, as well as submitted photos, showing members of the public modelling Burberry trench coats. The site is said to have helped fuel the brand’s Facebook fanbase to more than 1m in its first year.
As Burberry’s sales have rocketed over the past decade, Aquascutum’s have nose-dived. The brand was bailed out by current owner YGM Trading but remains under the radar. While its trench coat designs have stayed watertight, the brand is not impervious to the rapid changes of fashion. The lesson? New materials, new colours and new accessories must always be sought in order to keep this handsome design icon in the limelight. The trench coat will always cope with the weather in the streets, but must adapt to the shifting expectations of the international catwalk too.
If you would like to comment on this story or anything else you have seen on BBC Culture, head over to our Facebook page or message us on Twitter.
There is its neutral role as a smart, double-breasted, weather-resistant staple for businessmen; its powerful silver-screen status as the uniform of sly film noir gangsters and wisecracking detectives; and then, of course, its pervy side. Add a pair of stilettos and the belted, buttoned up trench becomes erotically charged, suggesting − just like the kilt – an underlying state of undress. While, in more negative terms, the poor old trench will never be able to shake off its reputation as the go-to uniform for flashers.
Heritage British trench coat brand Burberry, which over the past 13 years has climbed to powerhouse status under chief creative officer − and soon to be chief executive officer − Christopher Bailey, certainly played up the sexy side of the garment in the recent campaign for its Burberry Body fragrance. It featured a reclining Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, totally nude but for a strategically-positioned, open trench coat, recalling Helmut Newton’s iconic images of trench coat- and high heel-clad models from the 1970s.
The trench coat’s name recalls its utilitarian roots as a modern, highly-functional, lightweight garment developed for British officers during World War I to help protect them from the elements on the front line. Two brands hold claim to its invention: Aquascutum, whose trench coats went on to be adopted by Winston Churchill, Cary Grant, Lauren Bacall, Michael Caine and Peter Sellers for his role as Inspector Clouseau in the Pink Panther series; and the aforementioned Burberry, whose celebrity coups range from putting Humphrey Bogart and Audrey Hepburn in their coats (for Casablanca and Breakfast at Tiffany’s respectively), and, decades later, tapping fashion royalty schoolboy Romeo Beckham for a campaign.
Aquascutum, whose trench coats for WWI officers featured removable, buttoned-in linings, had been outfitting officers in raincoats made from waterproof cotton since the mid-19th Century. The house’s founder, John Emary patented the first water-repellent cloth in 1853; the brand’s name comes from the Latin words for water and shield. Certain trench coat aficionados trace the oldest likely trench coat in existence to an 1851 grey showerproof Aquascutum coat worn by Lt Gen Gerald Goodlake during the Crimean war. The garment is said to be preserved at Newstead Abbey in England.
Thomas Burberry patented his own water-repellent fabric, gabardine, a tightly woven twill weave, in 1879. He was reportedly inspired by the weatherproof linen smocks worn by English shepherds and farmers and designed what the fashion house that bears his name claims was the predecessor to the trench, the Tielocken coat (nicknamed ‘the Burberry’), in 1912. “‘A veritable suit of mail’ is how one magazine would describe the gabardine coat,” reads an entry in online fashion resource, Voguepedia. “Maharajas and country doctors alike adored the all-purpose, all-weather garment. ‘Fetch me my Burberry,’ King Edward VII would instruct his valet.”
The classic double-breasted trench coat truly took shape when its shoulder straps (for the attachment of epaulettes or other rank insignia) and D-rings (for holding equipment, such as maps) were added to meet new combat requirements for WWI. Other key features of the coat included ten buttons on the front, waist and wrist belts, wide lapels, a gun flap and raglan sleeves. Its original colour was khaki.
Return of the mac
Another term often used for the trench coat − the mac − points to another strong link to its origins, however, with many attributing its inspiration to Charles Macintosh, a Scottish chemist and inventor of waterproof fabrics who in the 1820s invented the single-breasted, long rubberised raincoat that reportedly influenced Emary and Burberry. The coat was later referred to as the Macintosh, and eventually the Mackintosh, with a ‘k’. Macintosh collaborated with British inventor Thomas Hancock, founder of the British rubber industry, who in 1843 took out a patent for the vulcanisation of rubber using sulphur, producing a material still used in raincoats and footwear − such as Converse sneakers − today.
The classic double-breasted military-chic trench coat is said to have infiltrated civilian wardrobes following the war, when surplus stock was handed out by the government. Adopted by the well-to-do hunting set and gents in the city, they rapidly became a fashion and film fixture, sported by dashing protagonists of the film noir genre in the 1940s, mainly accessorised with a wide ribbon fedora and a cigarette dangling from the mouth. The look was to resurface in the French New Wave films of the 1960s, such as Le Cercle Rouge and Le Samourai starring Alain Delon, and Le Doulos starring Jean-Paul Belmondo. Other trench-clad heroes include Michael Caine as hardman Jack Carter in the 1971 gangster film Get Carter and Harrison Ford as bounty hunter Rick Deckard in Blade Runner (1982).
A string of leading ladies also embraced the trench coat’s photogenic, architectural lines, including Greta Garbo, and Marlene Dietrich, paving the way for generations of androgynous-chic icons to come, including Audrey Hepburn, Charlotte Rampling and Charlotte Gainsbourg.
A stalwart of the runways, with myriad deconstructed interpretations rolling out season after season, the trench coat undoubtedly has stood the test of time because of its defining features. Yet just as the coat, with its high-tech materials, was revolutionary in its day, offering a modern alternative to the cumbersome greatcoats of yore, it’s important to keep innovating.
Trench warfare
The fate of the two main competing trench coat brands lies in the need to move with the times. Burberry has been transformed by Christopher Bailey and CEOs Rose Marie Bravo and Angela Ahrendts into a multi-billion dollar player, and its meteoric success depends on leveraging the brand’s heritage – it maintains a 'Made in Britain' policy for the manufacture of its trenches – while injecting a new vision. Customers can choose between Heritage and Runway versions, from classic styles in English-woven gabardine or reinterpretations using innovative fabrics like an oxblood velvet-finish vinyl for men or calfskin, screen-printed with black hearts for women.
Not to mention the house’s ambitious social media and marketing strategies, such as the live-streaming of shows and recruitment of a string of hip British muses, from Emma Watson to Tara (son of Bryan) Ferry. Launched in 2009, the brand’s popular blog, Art of the Trench, billed as a “living document of the trench coat,” features series by established image makers, as well as submitted photos, showing members of the public modelling Burberry trench coats. The site is said to have helped fuel the brand’s Facebook fanbase to more than 1m in its first year.
As Burberry’s sales have rocketed over the past decade, Aquascutum’s have nose-dived. The brand was bailed out by current owner YGM Trading but remains under the radar. While its trench coat designs have stayed watertight, the brand is not impervious to the rapid changes of fashion. The lesson? New materials, new colours and new accessories must always be sought in order to keep this handsome design icon in the limelight. The trench coat will always cope with the weather in the streets, but must adapt to the shifting expectations of the international catwalk too.
If you would like to comment on this story or anything else you have seen on BBC Culture, head over to our Facebook page or message us on Twitter.
BBC Culture salutes the trench coat:
http://www.bbc.com/culture/
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