vintage
clothing labels: Arrow ARROW 
Authentic
American Style In 1825, A New York Housewife
named Hannah Lord Montaque in Troy was looking for an easier way to keep her husband's
shirts looking fresh without having to launder them, and stumbled upon the detachable
shirt collar. The idea took off like wild fires and made Troy the center fore
collar manufacturing. Among the
companies making collars was Maullin & Blanchard, a small business that started
production in 1851. The company eventually became known as Cluett, Peabody and
Co, and in 1885, the Arrow
brand was born. Within a few years, they were the largest maker of collars in
the world.
Later in
1905, the Arrow Company hired a new artist J.C. Leyendecker to develop a fresh
image for their collars. He came up with the Arrow Collar Man, a handsome
young man wearing the latest style of Arrow collar. This ad campaign that lasted
over twenty years, and generated 1000s of fan letters from female fans.
By the
middle of the 1920s, times were changing and men were dressing more casually.
The days of the stiff detached collar were drawing to a close. The Arrow company
decided to switch from collars to shirts. They advertised that in order to get
an Arrow collar, one must get an Arrow shirt. In 1930, in an effort to find a
fabric that did not shrink when washed, Sanford Cluett, nephew of the founders
of the company, developed a process the company named Sanforizing.
They ended up licensing this process to hundreds of other companies.
 In
the 1930s, as Americans turned increasingly to sportswear, Arrow began making
sports shirts with open collars and straight cut hems. This trend was interrupted
by World War II, when the company made military uniforms, but when the War ended,
they expanded their sportswear selections, including slacks and shorts, casual
jackets and beachwear. They also continued to make shirts for the businessman,
including the new button-down collar. 
Through
the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, as times and fashions changed, so did the shirt offerings
from Arrow. They are still in business today, and are still making men's shirts.
But they also make almost any garment a man would need, and they now have a women's
line. More
information can be found at http://www.arrowshirt.com/
More Vintage Labels
|