Los Angeles Rams Camouflage Skull American Flag Hawaiian Shirt And Shorts,
Some details about our product
Hawaiian Shirt
KEY FEATURES:
- Summer Short Sleeve Hawaiian Beach Shirt. Casual/Dating/Sun Beach Party/Hawaiian/suitable for a variety of occasions
- Suitable for special occasions such as Christmas, birthday, celebration, housewarming gift.
PRODUCT INFORMATION:
- 100% KATE SILK
- Casual button-down shirts /Soft decent Regular fit/Breathable/Good Quality/Men designer shirts /Good
- Choice for Summer/men Hawaiian shirts
Shorts
KEY FEATURES:
- Side pockets store essentials.
- A ribbed drawcord waistband adjusts for a snug fit, and side-seam pockets store your small essentials.
- Running, jogging, gym, workout, fitness, walking, outdoor living, everyday wear, exercise, layering, lounging, activewear, etc.
- Suitable for special occasions such as Christmas, birthday, celebration, housewarming gifts.
PRODUCT INFORMATION:
- 35% Cotton – 65% Polyester, soft and comfortable, without ever fading, cracking, peeling, or flaking-high quality.
- The colors are vibrant and won’t fade.
FLIP FLOPS
KEY FEATURES:
- Daily casual flip flops, beach thong sandals, pool slippers, shower shoes, water shoes.
- Enjoy the relaxation and freedom you can feel with flip flops!
- Suitable for special occasions such as Christmas, birthday, celebration, housewarming gift.
PRODUCT INFORMATION:
- Made of EVA, easy slip-on, it provides you with lightness, breathable and comfort when walking.
- Rubber strap provides a frictionless and smooth feeling between your toes, supporting your walking and providing the ultimate instant comfort feeling.
- The high-quality EVA outsole improves the durability and slips resistance of the flip flops.
The Hawaiian Shirt’s Background
Mainland Hawaii has long been seen as a haven for stressed-out Americans. Hawaiian music was all the rage during World War I, as America was ready to enter the battle. Hawaiian records outsold all other genres in 1916, and ukuleles were so common in college dorms and upper-crust nightclubs that the New York Tribune published a full-page image of a hypothetical “Ukulele Square, the Hawaiian Quarter of New York.” During the Great Depression, Americans turned their attention to Hawaii once more, adopting another aspect of Hawaiian culture: the aloha shirt.
The aloha shirt first developed in Hawaii in the 1920s or 1930s, when local Japanese women adapted kimono cloth for use in men’s shirting, however its exact beginnings are lost to history. When the shirts were introduced to the mainland in the mid-1930s, they gained greater economic success.
At the time, America was stalled by poverty and fear, with many men out of work and others fighting to keep their breadwinner position. Perhaps as a result, hyper-manliness became fashionable—popularity bodybuilding’s increased, and Superman appeared on the scene. It may be counterintuitive that males would enjoy a clothing with such a feminine appeal.
The Los Angeles Times mocked in 1936, “You’d better order two or three because it’s a surety your daughter, sister, wife, or even mother will want this bright-colored garment as soon as she sees it.” This did not deter guys from purchasing. Aloha shirts were raking in about $11 million per year (in today’s money) by 1940.
Rich, prominent men wore it, which was one of the reasons men chose a clothing that was otherwise appropriate to their sisters’ closet. Visitors to Hawaii in the 1930s were almost always wealthy, and aloha shirts were soon being sold by celebrities who wanted to be like them.
From three-time Olympic swimmer and surfing pioneer Duke Kahanamoku to famous singer Bing Crosby, American icons were lending their names to certain businesses. According to Dale Hope, a historian and author of The Aloha Shirt: Spirit of the Islands, these endorsements had a “great effect” on individuals buying the shirts.
It didn’t matter if it was feminine if you could dress like a man who hadn’t been affected by the Depression: you looked like someone who didn’t have to worry about his manly credentials.
When the garment arrived in stores in the Lower 48, any day laborer could get what had previously required an extravagant trip for just a dollar. With its representations of hula dancers and Lūʻau—“symbol[s] of the comfortable, gay, and picturesque,” as one journalist described it in 1939—a man in an aloha shirt could pass for a carefree swell.
With the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, the image of Hawaii as a peaceful paradise was destroyed, and aloha shirt producers, like others in the textile sector, switched to providing the war effort. When manufacture resumed, the customary Japanese-influenced designs—featuring cherry blossoms and shrines—were briefly replaced by motifs that highlighted Hawaii’s native culture. Returning service members from the Pacific made the characteristic clothing more popular than ever.
The shirt had become genuinely widespread by the 1960s. Aloha Fridays were a staple of a certain type of business, and everyone seemed to wear one, from Elvis to the decidedly unhip Richard Nixon. It slipped into the realm of goofy suburban-dad-wear over time, probably inexorably.
Yet, in only the last five years, fashion magazines have predicted a revival, and high-end designers like Gucci are elevating the aloha shirt to new heights with prints inspired by Japanese themes popular in the early days of the garment. Meanwhile, some of Hawaii’s old guard shirtmakers are still going strong.
Kahala, which was one of the first manufacturers to produce aloha shirts in 1936, has been digging through its archives to recreate designs from the 1930s, including ones popularized by Duke Kahanamoku. “People are yearning for some brightness, color, and excitement in their lives,” says Kahala’s general manager, Jason Morgan. “I believe that now, more than ever, that is required. I think an aloha shirt has a lot of power if it can make someone’s day better.”
Connect us at:
Homepage: SWAGTSHIRT Store
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.