Rainy Saturday Night Manhattan.
December 8, 2014 § Leave a comment
Last night was very cold and rainy, so after dinner on our way home, we ducked into Le Parker Meridien to warm up, and took in The Gingerbread Extravaganza on display in the lobby.
Who Knew Dick Clark Sold Women’s Shoes? | Boot And Shoe Recorder, 1960
December 5, 2014 § 4 Comments
In Honor Of The Orion Spacecraft…Some Fashion For Mars.
December 4, 2014 § 2 Comments
If all goes well tomorrow morning NASA’s Orion spacecraft will launch from Cape Canaveral in Florida.
Watch: First Test Flight for NASA Spacecraft That May Take Us to Mars – Wired
One Step for Space Fashion, One Giant Leap for Astronaut Safety

Source: http://urbantaster.com
Note: Jerry Pankin was a shoe designer in Manhattan. I remember hearing his name growing up and found the above copy while doing research on my grandfather, Ben Benjamin. I asked my mother about Jerry and she remembered he was a lot of fun. She recalled him telling her once in jest he was going to design a refrigerator a foot deep that covered the length of a room, that way you could always find what you were looking for. Genius!

Source: spacecollective.org
A Few Photos…Of Me.
December 2, 2014 § 12 Comments
So many fashion bloggers put themselves in their blogs – literally. For someone like myself who devoted a large part of their youth to a career in the performing arts I’m surprised by my own reticence to doing this and can’t see myself modeling my favorite shoes or clothes. Maybe it’s where I’m at in my life — raising my son and trying to find that all too illusory balance between family and work or perhaps it’s my innate fear of the power and danger of the Internet and the loss of freedom that goes with that. Who knows? Maybe it’s also because I’m not sure where I fit in? Is this really a fashion blog? Whenever I write a post there’s a place to click category. For almost a year now every post has been checked uncategorized. It’s only recently that I’ve started to try and figure that one out. Maybe it’s also because I am a mom and my focus has now shifted off of myself to taking pictures of my son or that really I’m the one that likes to take the pictures rather than pose for them! In addition there’s nothing like motherhood to make one lose their sense of vanity. I’m sure most mothers out there know exactly what I mean. I’ve gone whole days without looking in the mirror. Something that would seem so shocking to my 20 something self…so, I decided I would try and find a few different photos through the years to post and found I actually had much more than I thought. Here’s a sampling — so what category would you choose for my blog?

Photo by Norine Perreault
Elusive Memories And The Crash Of 1929.
November 29, 2014 § 12 Comments
I’ve imagined for so long the stories that were told to me that they’ve become part of my own memory. My dad traveled when we were children so my sisters and I spent a lot of time with our grandfather. He taught us to remember who and where we came from and no matter how much money you have you’ll never be poor if you know your history. He wasn’t what I would think of as religious, but lit candles every Friday night and said prayers. He believed in Jewish Mysticism before it was trendy and told us about a man in London that he met when he was young who read the bumps on his head and told him about how in the future everyone would be watching a box. When he couldn’t sleep at night he would lay in bed imagining fantastical machines he would invent and later tell us about them. I also remember him telling us that he didn’t suffer during the great depression because he hadn’t put everything in the stock market. Seemingly conservative – but also extremely open minded. Because of his heart condition my parents were very protective of him. I remember when my aunt had cancer and I overheard them saying they were afraid to tell him how bad it was, keeping him from the news until she died and making sure he was sitting down with a glass of scotch when they did tell him. I never understood why they didn’t have faith that someone who had experienced so much loss wouldn’t be able to handle it — he did. He told us he believed in moderation. Maybe, because of his humble beginnings. That having too much of anything wasn’t good and took pride in telling us that he used the money he did make to bring his brothers and sisters to America.
We always made a profit. Even through the depression in 1929 and 30 we still made a profit. We didn’t lose any money see? Ben Benjamin talking about Schwartz and Benjamin.(from the tapes I made as a child)
I recently found this album full of beautiful unmarked photos. I never knew my grandfather when he was healthy and physically strong so it’s fun to see him in a different light and amazing to remember the adversity that he overcame from his Dickensian childhood. I’m guessing they’re from the late 1920’s or early 1930’s.
Fashion Historian Jonathan Walford Answers My Questions About The V Cut Throat Pump.
November 26, 2014 § Leave a comment
Curious about my grandfather’s V cut throat pump that I wrote about in my previous post, I contacted Fashion Historian Jonathan Walford. Jonathan has an illustrious resume which includes Curatorial Director of The Fashion History Museum in Ontario, Canada and Founding Curator of The Bata Shoe Museum. Jonathan is also an accomplished writer. Two of his books, The Seductive Shoe: Four Centuries of Fashion Footwear and Shoes A-Z: Designers, Brands, Manufacturers, and Retailers, are published by Thames & Hudson.
You can see he’s definitely the go to person when you have any fashion history questions. Here’s what he had to say:
A design patent protects the patent holder for three years before it falls into general use. They are rarely taken out because they are expensive, laborious and non-renewable, they also don’t require legal proof of original design, which a regular patent would require. As your grandfather made shoes for independent shoe retailers and stores it would make sense that he took out design patents to protect his shoe designs which kept them from being knocked off by someone else.
The V throat was certainly fashionable in shoes in the 1940s, and again in the 1980s, so your grandfather may have originated the fashion in Western footwear, although he wouldn’t have financially benefited from that, as a design patent is not the same as an intellectual copyright – you don’t own the idea for your lifetime. I can’t think of any ‘V’ cut throats that predate the late 1930s unless I look at examples like these below from China from the 1910s. Your grandfather may have borrowed the idea from shoes similar to these, or come up with the idea on his own.
The V Throat Pump By Ben Benjamin.
November 26, 2014 § Leave a comment
I invented a lot of things. I started the first pump with a V throat. It’s a Pump, but instead of a round throat…this came in a v shape. See?… We did well with that. That Patent stood for quite a while, cause the red cross people…they wanted me to come to Cincinnnati where their factory was to show them how to make it, and I did. I went down there, stayed a few days… – Ben Benjamin
Mr. Delman Has Announced That He Will Take Action Against Anyone Copying His Ideas And Styles…Retail News Of The Week, Saturday, January 19th, 1929.
November 25, 2014 § Leave a comment
Design by Henry Dreyfuss for Delman Shoe Company, 1929 (Cooper-Hewitt) Courtesy:Smithsonian Institution.
Shoe Patent
Now I had patented that design, but first thing I knew everyone started to copy it. All Manufacturers. But we did a lot with it. You had to sue them and we didn’t have that much money. We were a small company, see? Cost you and dragged on for 2 or 3 years. By the time the trial comes up the style is all gone, over. Wasn’t worth it. After a while I stopped patenting styles. It didn’t pay. – Ben Benjamin































