Masters green jacket rules: Does winner keep it? Who makes it? - The Augusta Chronicle

The green jacket is the ultimate symbol of success in golf A golfer wearing the single-breasted, single-vent garment has achieved something special: a victory at the Masters Tournament. Augusta National Golf Club members began wearing the jackets in 1937. The idea was to have them be easily identifiable so they could answer questions from patrons. MASTERS LIVE UPDATES: Masters leaderboard live updates, scores today: Scottie Scheffler seeks second green jacket Brooks Uniform Co. in New York made the original jackets, which featured heavy wool material. Those soon gave way to a lightweight version that could be custom-ordered from the club's pro shop. Here's what to know about the Masters green jacket: Do Masters champions keep the green jacket? The green jacket is reserved for Augusta National members and golfers who win the Masters. Jackets are kept on club grounds, and taking them off the premises is forbidden. The exception is for the winner, who can take it home and return i

Who's Afraid Of The Skinny Jean Revival? - Vogue

I have lost track of how many times skinny jeans have simultaneously been declared dead and alive. Even in 2021, a time when fashion's pendulum of desire had swung to an extreme, oversized silhouette thanks to the mainstreaming of brands like Balenciaga, ultra-slim jeans still made up the largest share of women's jeans at 34% of sales in the US. A large proportion of my own "muggle" friends—ie. those who don't work in fashion and whose wardrobes remain frozen in the amber of their student days–continue to wear skinnies on nights out, often with Doc Martens and sparkly crop tops. I think those people will be relieved – if not disinterested – to learn that tight jeans are on the crest of a culture-wide resurgence, having been an intense presence throughout the autumn/winter 2024 collections, among them Dsquared2, Miu Miu, Prada, and Louis Vuitton.

Much like the Alexander McQueen skull scarf and Sienna Miller's boho disc belts, the skinny jean has, over recent years, been used as a pawn in the ongoing culture wars between Gen-Z and Millennials. (Every generation thinks they have solved the denim conundrum). But here's the thing: the trend cycle is now operating at such a ferocious pace that almost everything is trending at once, the lack of a trend in effect being the biggest trend of all. There have always been women and men who will wear attenuated jeans, and there have been for decades. And so, at this point, it's perhaps less a question of fashion than preference. (Fashion also likes low-slung jeans, boyfriend jeans and horseshoe jeans.) And though twenty-somethings with TikTok accounts will likely baulk at the prospect of squeezing themselves into nerve-stemming denim, the horror associated with pencil pants is, in my opinion, undue and over-exaggerated.

Paris Hilton.

Getty Images

Katie Holmes.

Getty Images

At least part of this is because 10 years–which is just enough time for something to go from mainstream to subversive–have passed since the skinny jean was last popularised by the likes of Kate Moss, Lindsay Lohan, Katie Holmes, and Alexa Chung. It's hard to stress just how cool these women were in the 2010s. Their reign burnt long and it burnt bright. A cursory scroll through Getty Images will demonstrate the dwindling allure of the skinny jean from about 2018 onwards–at which point they're seen mostly on Amanda Holden and former Love Islanders with Boohoo contracts–but a new wave of Instagram It-girls and emergent designers, like Aaron Esh and Laura Andraschko, are rehabilitating the rakish silhouette, and the rock'n'roll lifestyles of its "indie sleaze" progenitors. Scroll through the gallery below to revisit some of the best examples of the not-so-controversial skinny jean in action.

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