1950s Men’s Fashion – Timeless Mid Century Style | FashionBeans (2024)

There’s a key moment in The Wild One, the 1953 youth-ploitation movie in which an outlaw biker gang runs rampant through Hicksville USA, when a starstruck girl inquires of their ringleader, an impeccably leather-jacketed, cuff-jeaned, scuff-booted, 1950s men’s fashion icon Marlon Brando, “Hey Johnny, what are you rebelling against?”

Brando’s response, with a world-weary sigh: “What’ve you got?”

The short answer, at least in sartorial terms, was: quite a lot. The early years of the decade were a style desert, a buttoned-up hangover of rigid post-war conformity in which even the maddest of men were trapped in grey-suit lockdown; but a great loosening-up had begun to occur by the time Brando roared into town.

Rock ‘n’ roll music, Beat poetry, and the abstract expressionists were leading the countercultural charge, andfashion took its cue from their let-it-all-hang-out ethos; cuts became looser, collars lost their starch, and elements of sportswear, workwear, and military uniform began to find their way into the everyday wardrobe.

What Is 1950s Men’s Fashion?

This was a time when some of today’s style staples – the turtleneck, the denim jacket , the knitted polo – were starting to come into their own, worn with an air of studied nonchalance, if not a sneer at the be-hatted corporate drones. But perhaps nothing symbolised the new, rebel-yell era more potently than the elevation of the humble white T-shirt.

Formerly a military-issue undergarment, it was suddenly draped across the decade’s most iconic chests; Brando got sweaty in one in 1951’s A Streetcar Named Desire, while James Dean brooded in one in Rebel Without A Cause (1955). Even Arthur Miller was pictured in one at his writing desk. “It became a kind of visual shorthand for rebellion,” says G. Bruce Boyer, fashion historian and author of True Style: The History and Principles of Classic Menswear, who was himself a teenager in the 1950s. “It represented the appropriation of blue-collar clothing for those who refused to buy into corporate society.”

1950s Men’s Fashion – Timeless Mid Century Style | FashionBeans (1)

Meanwhile, rockers like Elvis Presley left more formal dress codes, well, all shook up, replacing trilbies with slick quiffs, ties with button-down shirts, and fusty flannels with featherweight fleck-linen jackets. Jack Kerouac and the Beats made a fetish of utilitarian workwear, both in their lives – in their plaid shirts and beat-up blouson jackets – and in their literature: “His dirty work clothes clung to him so gracefully, as though you couldn’t buy a better fit from a custom tailor but only earn it from the Natural Tailor of Natural Joy,” writes Kerouac of Dean Moriarty (inspired by real-life Beat hipster Neal Cassady) in 1957’s On The Road.

Leading the pack of unruly artists, Jackson Pollock sported splattered denim overalls when creating his epoch-making drip paintings: “A lot of artists in the 1930s and 1940s dressed like accountants,” says Boyer. “Jackson and his peers wanted to look like the antithesis of that.” In their decisive break with sartorial tradition, the 1950s rebels found their ultimate – and most enduring – cause. “They broke the mould,” says Boyer. “And we’re continuing to live with their legacy.”

What Does 1950s Men’s Fashion Mean Today?

“I wanted to try and push some freedom into the men’s collections,” Miuccia Prada has said, “and one of the best ways I found of doing that was to reference a time – the 1950s – when men first found the freedom to express themselves with their clothes.”

While many brands have rebooted the classic 1950s men’s fashion – high-waisted trousers, Perfecto leather jackets, Cuban-collar shirts , penny loafers – Prada have done more than most to keep the faith while adding a modern twist; witness their recent collaboration with Mr Porter that consisted of striped bowling shirts, checked Harrington jackets, graphic knitted polos, suede blousons, and loafers in Prada’s own Spazzolato leather. “The 1950s was a time of celebration and optimism,” said Mr Porter buyer Daniel Todd, “and the collection reflects that.”

1950s Men’s Fashion – Timeless Mid Century Style | FashionBeans (2)Prada x Mr Porter

1950s men’s styles are also increasingly relevant at a time when traditional dress codes have broken down, and a well-placed knitted polo, textured sport coat, or pair of pleated trousers will add an air of breezy insouciance and smart-casual confidence to a work-or-play outfit.

“We’re at a similar point to the 1950s themselves, in some ways,” says the tailor and designer Timothy Everest . “Separates have largely replaced suits in most offices, so people need to find different ways to stand out. A lot of the shapes and patterns that are key to that – from the wider-leg trouser to the fine-checked blouson jacket – came to prominence in that decade.”

1950s Men’s Fashion – Timeless Mid Century Style | FashionBeans (3)Reiss

And other modern designers aside from Mrs Prada – Lucas Ossendrijver at Lanvin, Pierpaolo Piccioli at Valentino – have put their own spin on some of those looks, from printed satin bomber jackets to palm tree-print shirts. “The ‘50s styles laid down the marker for modern menswear,” Ossendrijver tells FashionBeans. “They can be reinvented again and again.”

But there’s another reason why 1950s men’s fashion is imperishable; more than half a century after Marlon Brando roared his way into cinematic history, they still carry a whiff of the subversive and the ineffably cool. From Cliff Richard’s urging us to move-it-and-a-groove-it in a drape jacket in 1958 (yes, he was a hepcat once) to a bequiffed Alex Turner donning a Saint Laurent varsity jacket in the 2010s, this particular revolt into style shows no sign of burning out.

As a contemporary issue of Life magazine declared, of the newly-minted species of teenager: “They live in a jolly world of gangs, games, movies , and music. They speak a curious lingo, adore chocolate milkshakes, wear moccasins everywhere, and drive like bats out of hell.” Be honest – sixty years on, who wouldn’t want to channel at least a little bit of that?

1950s Mens Lookbook

1950s Men’s Fashion – Timeless Mid Century Style | FashionBeans (4)

PRADA x Mr PORTER the kooples reiss mango man

Key 1950s Men’s Clothing

These are the key 1950s men’s fashion pieces that define the era and continue to inspire style today.

1. Cuban Collar Shirt

Nothing says ‘Havana blast’ more than this breezy summer, men’s casual staple, which can trace its history back to the 18th century in South America, where it was a kind of working-class uniform, though it really made a striped, checkered, and Polynesian-print splash in the 1950s, where it was seen on the back of everyone from Elvis to Montgomery Clift.

With its notch lapel-like collar (also known as a camp or revere collar), short sleeves, and straight, boxy hem, you could think of it as a classier take on the Hawaiian shirt. The modern variant has a more fitted cut and tapered sleeves; wear under a blazer for an off-duty Don Draper effect or roll the sleeves for the full Gene Vincent look. Reiss has a pretty good selection, both plain and printed, or try Timothy Everest’s bold-checked or white-weaved versions.

1950s Men’s Fashion – Timeless Mid Century Style | FashionBeans (5)

Reiss Castle - click to buy M&S COLLECTION Easy Iron Pure Cotton Cuban Collar Shirt - click to buy AllSaints Orizabo Camp Shirt - click to buy Todd Snyder Abstract Floral Short Sleeve Camp Collar Shirt - click to buy

2. Pleated Trousers

Those who would see the 1950s fashion as a bastion of flat-front uniformity in the trouser department didn’t reckon with the hepcats or the rockabillies, who were saying “pleats please” decades before Issey Miyake got in on the act. “The early rockers borrowed heavily from the zoot suits that the jazz musicians of the 1940s wore,” says G. Bruce Boyer. “It was a colourful, exaggerated take on tailoring.”

Pleated trousers create elegant lines and a full silhouette (though any maxi-pleated ‘80s-style take should be avoided, unless you’re heading to a Kid Creole & The Coconuts-themed costume party), work equally well in a formal or casual context, and have the added summertime benefit of allowing air to circulate around the pins. E.Tautz has many versions on offer – the beige cotton chinos are particularly mid-century chic – while Kent & Curwen’s come in utilitarian tan.

1950s Men’s Fashion – Timeless Mid Century Style | FashionBeans (6)

Form&Thread Organic Twill Double Pleated Trouser - click to buy Zegna COTTON AND WOOL DOUBLE PLEAT PANTS - click to buy Kenzo PLEATED SUIT TROUSERS - click to buy Todd Snyder Lightweight Italian Cotton Gurkha Trouser - click to buy

3. 1950s Men’s Shoes: Penny Loafers

The classic slip-on shoes (the ‘moccasins’ referred to in Life’s breathless anatomisation of the teenager) has a chequered history – Norwegian fishermen and small-denomination coins factor in at various points – but, for our purposes, it’s enough to know that these shoes became the classic finishing touch for the Ivy League preppy look that blossomed in the 1950s, and that they’ve been gracing the feet of every well-dressed man since, from Paul Newman – who remains the only man to pair them with white socks and still look cool – to Tinie Tempah.

If you want to go full prep, team an original pair of Bass Weejuns with khakis, navy blazer, Oxford button-down shirt, and knit tie (no socks, natch) and avoid the ‘enhancements’ that various designers have felt moved to add in the ensuing decades – zebra print, baroque tassels, Cuban heels, backless iterations with fun-fur trim and so on.

1950s Men’s Fashion – Timeless Mid Century Style | FashionBeans (7)

G.H. Bass LARSON EASY WEEJUNS LOAFER - click to buy Barker Caruso Loafers - click to buy Velasca Maester - click to buy Myrqvist Stenhammar - click to buy

4. Knitted Polo

The original polo shirt, pioneered by Rene Lacoste, was designed in the ‘20s as a breezy alternative to the heavily starched, long-sleeved whites that tennis players had hitherto laboured in; the knit polo, developed in the 1950s in fine-knit cottons and cashmeres, was a breezy alternative to the shirt, with patterned versions conferring pizzazz and Riviera-readiness on their wearers.

For confirmation, check out Dickie Greenleaf, as played by Jude Law in The Talented Mr. Ripley, all stripe-panel polos, cuffed shorts, and suede loafers , an object lesson in dressing with corniche-owning, bebop flair. Modern-day Dickies can sip their dirty proseccos in retro-futurist versions by the likes of Scott Fraser Collection (sky blue L-stripe), Next (textured with contrasting white) and Uniqlo (plain emerald green).

1950s Men’s Fashion – Timeless Mid Century Style | FashionBeans (8)

Ben Sherman INTARSIA STRIPE KNIT POLO - click to buy Ted Baker Ambler - click to buy Fred Perry Vertical Stripe Knitted Shirt - click to buy Dunhill Argyle Merino Long Sleeve Polo - click to buy

5. Blouson Jacket & Sport Coats

Where to start with the blouson? Starting out as the Harrington jacket, the sporty, waist-length, zippered, tartan-lined, elastic-cuffed mainstay was initially produced as one of the most lightweight rainproof golfing sport coats in the UK in the 1930s (the lining came courtesy of Lord Lovat, a British commando and keen putter who gave permission for his clan check to be used), but really took off after its export to the US in the 1950s, dovetailing with the trend for flight and bomber jackets worn by pilots during World War II and the Korean War.

It was taken up by the decade’s Holy Trinity of style – Elvis, Dean, Steve McQueen – and has since been adopted by subcultures from mods to soul boys and Britpop legends (take a lightweight bow, Damon Albarn and Liam Gallagher). You could do a lot worse than investing in an original Baracuta G9, but Prada’s silk number is a little more Drive, though at an investment-piece price.

1950s Men’s Fashion – Timeless Mid Century Style | FashionBeans (9)

Ben Sherman SIGNATURE HARRINGTON JACKET - click to buy Baracuta G9 Harrington Jacket - click to buy Prada Wool blouson jacket - click to buy Burberry Shearling Collar Leather Jacket - click to buy

6. Leather Jacket

Nothing screams 1950s men’s fashion icons like Marlon Brando riding a motorcycle, sporting a sharp leather jacket in The Wild One, or Fonzie in his iconic leather jacket in Happy Days. Even Grease was set in 1958 and we all know how much those guys loved their leather. In the 1950s and ensuing decades, leather jackets have been a staple in men’s wardrobes as a dependable, easy to reach for option with a bad boy flair.

Leather jackets are just one of those 1950s mens fashion pieces that will never going out of style, probably because they’re the perfect companion for jeans to top off a cool look. When shopping for your own, invest in quality leather that will last you for many years to come, and won’t fall apart from all those motorcycles you’ll be riding.

7. Fedora Hat

The traditional fedora reached great heights in 1950s men’s fashion, and was the most popular hat at the time, mostly thanks to Frank Sinatra. Well beloved in 50s cinema and by fashionable young men of the decade, the fedora is still a timeless piece for any man’s wardrobe.

Adding an old school twist to any outfit, fedoras aren’t just for your dad’s friends. They’re sleek and stylish, with an air of mystery. Today, many men don stingy brim fedoras with a brim that’s less than two inches. But for an even greater effect, try out a generous, or wide brim fedora for a lasting impression.

PRADA Satin Blouson Jacket - click to buy AUTOGRAPH Suede Harrington Jacket - click to buy GANT The New Hampshire Jacket - click to buy Baracuta G9 MODERN CLASSIC HARRINGTON JACKET - click to buy
1950s Men’s Fashion – Timeless Mid Century Style | FashionBeans (2024)

FAQs

What was the fashion for men in the 1950s? ›

Boxy jeans became a go-to for younger men, while gray slacks and khaki pants were favored for more formal occasions. Accessories such as bow ties, fedora hats, penny loafers, and pocket squares added a touch of personality and refinement to outfits.

What styles for men were especially popular in the 1950's included? ›

In the early 1950s, many men wore conservatively-colored, baggy suits with narrow ties. As the decade progressed, men's wardrobes became more textured, colorful, and casual. For leisure, men often donned lightweight sports coats and colored shirts paired with trousers.

What was the biggest fashion trend of the 1950s? ›

1950's Trends

1950's fashion was casual yet formal and elegant. Shoulder lines became more softened, corset waists became smaller, and rounded hips with long skirts became popular. The iconic gray felt poodle skirts emerged with white bobby socks and saddle shoes.

What style should a 50 year old man wear? ›

A 50+ year old man should dress casually in slim-straight jeans or chinos, solid color tees, polos or untucked button up shirts, and tasteful outerwear (like a Harrington jacket, leather jacket or bomber). For shoes, keep it simple with leather boots, casual loafers, or plain leather or suede sneakers .

Did men wear T-shirts in the 1950s? ›

1950s: The t-shirt was seen as a symbol of masculinity. As it was still largely considered an undergarment, its use as outerwear gained connotations of rebelliousness. Donned by film stars such as Marlon Brando and James Dean, the t-shirt became desirable for practical and fashionable reasons.

How did men dress in 1956? ›

Men's 1956-58 clothes were simpler than the suits of the 1940's. Gone were shoulder pads and most double-breasted suits. Jackets and trousers were shorter, although there was still a lot of fabric in the trouser legs. Ties were slightly slimmer and shirt collars less pronounced.

What were the fashion stereotypes in the 1950s? ›

Fashion in the 1950s saw a clear gender divide. While men and boy's fashion moved towards a more casual day-to-day style, women and girl's fashion prioritized elegance, formality, and perfectly matched accessories.

Did they wear khakis in the 50s? ›

Post-war, returning soldiers started to evolve the way they dressed, repurposing their military-issued khakis for everyday wear. By the 1950s, they'd taken off as the go-to weekend trouser for men, while college students adopted the look as an unofficial uniform for campus life.

What was one of the clothing styles that represented the 1950s? ›

Blouses and trousers—simple everyday fashion

In contrast to haute couture, which is characterized by elegance rather than suitability for everyday wear, women in the late 1950s wore simple skirts, pants, blouses and shirt dresses. In addition, the blouson was worn as a loose, hip-length blouse with a belt.

Why was 1950s fashion important? ›

Textiles in the 1950s became more advanced and wash and wear fabric became more apparent in ready to wear fashion. There was a wider range of clothing that became readily however women played the roles as homemakers. The look of a homemaker would dress for both style and comfort.

What kind of jeans did they wear in the 1950s? ›

The hallmark of '50s denim style, high waisted jeans accentuate the waistline while elongating the legs for a flattering look. Pair them with a tucked-in blouse or a cropped top to showcase your curves and embrace that retro vibe.

What was the fashion in 1955? ›

By 1955, tight fitting drainpipe jeans became popular among American women. Casual sportswear was also an increasingly large component of women's wardrobes, especially the white T-shirts popularized by Brigitte Bardot and Sandra Milo between 1957 and 1963. Casual skirts were narrow or very full.

Can older men wear T-shirts? ›

When it comes to fashion, there are a few t-shirt rules that older men should follow. One of the most important is to always prefer a standard fit. This means choosing shirts that flatter your figure rather than trying to squeeze into something that is trendier but doesn't fit well.

What should a 60 year old man wear? ›

If you want to ensure you always look appropriate in your clothes as a 60-plus man, consider investing in classic, timeless pieces. Embracing classic men's fashion styles like a crisp oxford shirt, flat-front chinos, and white leather sneakers will make getting dressed easier and give you more confidence.

What clothes look good on older men? ›

Outfits that combine comfort with elegance are both stylish and suitable for older men: Casual Looks: Pair polo shirts or crew-neck sweaters with chinos or dark jeans for a smart-casual look. Business Casual: A crisp button-down shirt under a v-neck sweater or blazer pairs well with well-fitting trousers.

What did people actually wear in the 50s? ›

Blouses and trousers—simple everyday fashion

In contrast to haute couture, which is characterized by elegance rather than suitability for everyday wear, women in the late 1950s wore simple skirts, pants, blouses and shirt dresses. In addition, the blouson was worn as a loose, hip-length blouse with a belt.

What defined 1950s fashion? ›

Women's Trends of the 1950s: The Hourglass Silhouette Reigns

Now, shoulders were softened with padding that rounded them, waists were snatched and shrunk to Victorian proportions, and hips were exaggerated with tulle and crinolines that added bulk. The goal? A supremely “feminine” silhouette.

What did black men wear in the 1950s? ›

The little details were what brought looks together like shirts with embroidery, hats paired with a shirt and pants rather than a suit—and of course, emphasis was put on accessories—watches, glasses, and belts. Five men in particular were true '50s cool ambassadors: Sammy Davis Jr., Dr.

What was popular male fashion in 1960? ›

Additionally, polo shirts, turtlenecks, spear point collars, and tab collars could all be worn. Fabric-covered buttons were popular with the modernist in the 1960s. Fabric-covered buttons were also popular with the mods and higher-necked, double-breasted jackets and crumby overcoats were also widely seen.

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