VintageGent's Menswear Daily

Beach Cruisin


October 7th, 2008

beach_day.jpgThe days may be getting shorter and you may be thinking about pulling your woolens out of storage. As for me, my sense of season is sometimes very askew.  Since I moved closer to the beach, I tend to not quite think about even purchasing an overcoat until January.  People are on their beach cruiser bikes through December.  Actually, only people who are from out of town are on them in January.

There is that one week in January where the temperature dips to 30 for those two nights, I get out all my winter hats and overcoats and boots out.  People think I am nuts, as it is only like that after 9:00 P.M. for a couple nights.  The ones I think are strange are folks who come down here from the great white winter in the north.  When its 50 degrees Fahrenheit out, they have spring fever and are running around in shorts.

On the other hand, when I go up there, people give me odd looks for being in a parka in October.  They say that your blood thins when you live in the south because it is so warm.  I don’t know what that really means, but all I know is that I have lost my ability to tolerate a real old fashioned Upper Peninsula/Minnesota/Upstate New York winter

Joe Famolare and the History of Famolare Shoes Part I: The Beginning


October 7th, 2008

On August 16, 2005, “Joe Famolare and the History of Famolare Shoes” was presented in workshop format as a part of The Vintage Fashion Guild’s “Fashionable Summer” designer workshop series on week #7 . The presenter was the author of this blog. The following article is a synopsis of presented information. Text (c) VintageGent, and The Vintage Fashion Guild. and the additional photos are copyright their respective sources (advertisements, press photos) or contributors (shoe photos). Use without permission prohibited, but may be obtained under certain circumstances and permitted in writing.

Joe Famolare and the History of Famolare ShoesPart I: The Beginning.

Joe Famolare grew up in a third generation shoe making family. He was born in Boston and grew up in Chestnut Hill, which is a neighborhood/area on Boston’s south side. His father, Joe Sr. owned Famolare Shoe Engineering, which was opened in 1934. The company made cutting patterns for the shoe industry. Joe Jr started working at the family business at the tender age of 12. Very cognizant of the child labor laws, Joe Sr. required him to pay income tax and file at that age. When he became the age of majority, he had already designed shoes and was a young executive at the family business.

Despite this early sucess he deviated from the family business and started singing in nightclubs for tips! According to Joe himself: ” I hated the shoe business. It was so dusty and boring, and the people didn’t seem happy. I could sing, and I studied voice seriously, and I found that people liked to hear me sing. So I went to Emerson to be an actor.”

For the next several years, he attended Emerson college in Boston and pursued a degree in the musical theater. Midway through, his dreams were put on hold. He was drafted by the US Army. Joe served at the very tail end of the Korean war as a radio operator, broadcasting having been a minor in college studies.

After he left the millitary, at age 23, he soon decided that a singing career was not for him. Despite his disenchantment with the shoe business, he learned that long, highly irregular hours of a musical career and the irregular and meager pay brought forth by relying on tips was not for him.

Joe Sr. demanded that he could not just wander around “finding himself, that Joe Jr. needed to get a job. So, Joe was again hurdled into the shoe business and took night courses to finish a degree.

His decided deviation from his roots was short lived indeed. He melded his two interests leaving the family business being hired at Capezio, reknowned in the dance shoe business… in 1960.

Tune in for Part II…

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