Bow Ties Sydney, Australia - Le Noeud Papillon - Specialists In Self Tying Bow Ties


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Tuesday, August 23, 2022

The Seiko Alpinist Review - I Took It Into A Proper Blizzard And It Was Fantastic

 Let me start by saying I strongly disliked Seiko as a young man. I once bought a quartz diver's watch off a friend and I regretted it a few weeks later, it was totally underwhelming. 

I always associated Seiko with the following - a series of diver's watches that I never wanted to own, a few knock off designs that looked like a scalloped Rolex day date and some digital watches or hybrid digital watches from memory that were solar powered. I considered them to be a Toyota, not even a Lexus. 

One of my closest friends insisted that they were unbelievable watches with extraordinary bang for buck, but he was a diver's watch fan, though I'd never seen him dive once (whereas I did, and I used a Suunto freediver's watch for many years) and they were big clunky pieces of metal with large rubber straps that seemed to be all over his wrist. 

Roughly 30 years after I bought my first Seiko I was strolling through the Stand Arcade after dropping off stock to a store that we work with when I decided to drop in watch store on the ground floor which sells used and new watches. I had no intention of buying a watch, none at all. 

To my surprise as I was casting my eye over the Seiko range I discovered this watch that to me looked as elegant as an IWC and it had a lovely green shimmy in the lights of the store and so I enquired about it and asked to try it on. It was on my wrist for all over 5 seconds before I told the sales assistant to bag it up. The watch came with a black leather strap with a deployment clasp which I knew I'd switch out with one of my favourite green crocodile straps. When she added that it was their "Alpinist" model that had been reissued and was Seiko's first ever outdoor sports watch, well, a very happy look came over my face. I was to depart for the mountains in under a fortnight. 

I am now a Seiko fan. I took that watch deep into the Snowy Mountains in blizzard condition and it didn't fog up, worked a treat and at night it lit up like a Christmas tree so I always knew what time it was. I cannot fault this watch and given that it is just over $1000 AUD I think it's one of the best bang for buck watches I have ever owned. 

If you are looking for a watch that is both elegant and functional for sports - look no further. 

Shop them here. 








Thursday, August 4, 2022

The Snow Brumbies By Le Noeud Papillon - A 90x 90cm Kerchief And Pochette


If there is one thing that I hold myself to it's that if I say I am going to do something I make sure I do it. It was something left over from my childhood, my mother used to give us a stern talking to saying "if you are going to do something, do it. Don't be an "I'm gonna". Do it!". 

So nearly forty years later I am still like a petulant child unable to focus on anything except what I want and when I am focused I am laser like. At other times I am a sloth, but we can delve into that on another occasion. 

The genesis of this was sighting wild brumbies on the plains of Currango in the National Park. Two months later we produced the first of the brumbies silks which I will show you in a separate post. Whilst I was sketching the initial concept, and I can't lie here, the bulk of the work was done by my illustrator Lucy, but when I began, concurrently as I was sketching a woman named Jilly Foster passed to me a book to read on the subject of wild brumbies. On the cover was a brumby in what appeared a very cold and stark environment though not necessarily snowing. I took a photo of it, and that's where this new silk came to life. 

Referencing Hokusai and Japanese woodblock printing I instructed Lucy to begin sketching with references the simplicity of Japanese wood block design to create three horses braving the winter snows. I think she has done a superb job and I am super happy knowing it's at the printers and come September we will begin sampling. 

Stay tuned. 

N.