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Aloha shirt

The aloha shirt (Hawaiian: palaka aloha[1]), also referred to as a Hawaiian shirt, is a style of dress shirt originating in Hawaii. They are collared and buttoned dress shirts, usually short-sleeved and made from printed fabric. They are traditionally worn untucked, but can be worn tucked into the waist of trousers. They are worn casually or as informal business attire in Hawaii.

A vintage aloha shirt, circa 1960

"Aloha Friday", or Casual Friday, a now-common tradition of celebrating the end of the workweek by wearing more casual attire on Fridays, initially grew out of an effort to promote aloha shirts.[2]

Design Edit

Aloha dress shirts are printed, mostly short-sleeved, and collared. They almost always have buttons, sometimes for the entire length of the shirt or at least up to the chest. They usually have a left chest pocket sewn in, often with attention to ensure the printed pattern remains continuous. Aloha shirts may be worn by men or women. Women's aloha shirts usually have a lower-cut, v-neck style.

The lower hems are straight,[3] and the shirts are often worn with the shirt-tails hanging out, rather than tucked in. Wearing an untucked shirt was possibly influenced by the local Filipinos who wore shirt-tail out, and called these bayau meaning "friend".[5][6][a] Wearing it untucked or tucked depends on personal taste; it carries the same connotations of tucking or untucking a polo shirt. In the 1950s, the shirt became allowed as business attire for aloha week, but only if worn tucked in.[8][9]

Traditional men's aloha shirts are usually adorned with traditional Hawaiian quilt designs, tapa designs, and simple floral patterns in more muted colors. Contemporary aloha shirts may have prints that do not feature any traditional Hawaiian quilt or floral designs but instead may incorporate drinks, palm trees, surf boards or other island tropical elements in a similar form as the traditional aloha shirt.[10]

It has been observed that locals (kamaʻāina) tended to shy away from the garishness of aloha shirts as "too wild" when they first appeared,[11] whereas tourists embraced wearing designs of many bright colors.[6] An example of the type of shirt the locals may prefer includes the "reverse print"; these shirts are often printed on the interior, resulting in the muted color on the exterior.[citation needed]

History Edit

 
Quilt made from vintage aloha shirt fabric, circa 1960s

According to some sources, the origin of aloha shirts can be traced to the 1920s[12] or the early 1930s,[13] when the Honolulu-based dry goods store "Musa-Shiya the Shirtmaker" under the proprietorship of Kōichirō Miyamoto,[13] started making shirts out of colorful Japanese prints.[b][12][13] It has also been contended that the aloha shirt was devised in the early 1930s by Chinese merchant Ellery Chun of "King-Smith Clothiers and Dry Goods", a store in Waikiki.[15][16] Although this claim has been described as a myth reinforced by repeated telling,[17] Chun may have been the first to mass-produce[7] or to maintain the ready-to-wear in stock to be sold off the shelf.[4][5]

The name "aloha shirt" appeared later. By 1935 and 1936, the word aloha was being attached to various sorts of Hawaiian products, so calling the garments "aloha shirts" was hardly original.[12] The term aloha shirt first appeared in print in an advertisement for Musa-Shiya in the June 28, 1935 issue of The Honolulu Advertiser newspaper.[12][18] However, Ellery Chun is sometimes credited for coining the term,[19] perhaps in 1933;[20] Chun's store reportedly carried window signs that said "aloha shirts".[7][21] The term "aloha sportswear" was registered as a trademark by Chun's company in 1936,[12][4] followed by Chun trademarking "Aloha Shirt" in 1937 and owning the rights to this appellation for the next 20 years.[22]

 
Tori Richard aloha shirts in a store

Within years, major designer labels sprang up all over Hawaii and began manufacturing and selling aloha shirts en masse. By the end of the 1930s, 450 people were employed in an industry worth $600,000 annually.[23] Two notable manufacturers of this period are Kamehameha and Branfleet (later Kahala), both founded in 1936.[24][6] Retail chains in Hawaii, including some based on the mainland, may mass-produce a single aloha shirt design for employee uniforms.

After World War II, many servicemen and servicewomen returned to the United States from Asia and the Pacific islands with aloha shirts made in Hawaii since the 1930s.[25] One significant manufacturer was Shaheen, which began business in 1948.[6] Following Hawaii's statehood in 1959, when extant tropical prints came to be regarded as rather tacky, designer Alfred Shaheen became noted for producing aloha shirts of higher chic and quality, and Elvis Presley wore a Shaheen-designed red aloha on the album cover for Blue Hawaii (1961).[25][26] In 1956, Tori Richard, a well-known brand of alohas was established.[27][28] Spooner's of Waikiki, precursor of Reyn Spooner, also established business in 1956.[29]

Exports Edit

Garments manufactured in Hawaii could bear "Made in Hawaii" labels before statehood (1959), and even afterwards, their sales to mainland United States continued to be referred to as "exports".[30]

Aloha shirts tend to be referred to as "Hawaiian shirts" by the populace from the mainland United States,[6] and are often brilliantly colored with floral patterns or generic Polynesian motifs.[citation needed]

The aloha shirt is currently[when?] the premier textile export of the Hawaii manufacturing industry.[citation needed]

Aloha dress codes Edit

Aloha Week Edit

 
Man with a typical aloha shirt during the Aloha Festivals Floral Parade 2012

In 1946, the Honolulu Chamber of Commerce funded a study of aloha shirts and designs for comfortable business clothing worn during the hot Hawaiian summers. The City and County of Honolulu passed a resolution allowing their employees to wear sport shirts from June–October. City employees were not allowed to wear aloha shirts for business until the creation of the Aloha Week festival in 1947. The Aloha Week festival was motivated by both cultural and economic concerns: First held at Ala Moana Park in October, the festival revived interest in ancient Hawaiian music, dancing, sports, and traditions. There was a holoku ball, a floral parade, and a makahiki festival attended by 8,000 people. Economically, the week-long event first attracted visitors during October – traditionally a slow month for tourism – which benefited the Hawaiian fashion industry as they supplied the muʻumuʻu and aloha shirts worn for the celebration.[31] Aloha Week expanded in 1974 to six islands, and was lengthened to a month. In 1991, Aloha Week was renamed to Aloha Festivals.[32]

In the end, Aloha Week had a direct influence on the resulting demand for alohawear, and was responsible for supporting local clothing manufacturing: locals needed the clothing for the festivals, and soon people in Hawaii began wearing the clothing in greater numbers on more of a daily basis. Hawaii's fashion industry was relieved, as they were initially worried that popular clothing from the mainland United States would eventually replace aloha attire.[33]

Aloha Friday Edit

In 1962, a professional manufacturing association known as the Hawaiian Fashion Guild began to promote aloha shirts and clothing for use in the workplace, particularly as business attire. In a campaign called "Operation Liberation", the Guild distributed two aloha shirts to every member of the Hawaii House of Representatives and the Hawaii Senate. Subsequently, a resolution passed in the Senate recommending aloha attire be worn throughout the summer, beginning on Lei Day.[34] The wording of the resolution spoke of letting "the male populace return to 'aloha attire' during the summer months for the sake of comfort and in support of the 50th state's garment industry".[35]

In 1965, Bill Foster Sr., president of the Hawaii Fashion Guild, led the organization in a campaign lobbying for "Aloha Friday", a day employers would allow men to wear aloha shirts on the last business day of the week a few months out of the year.[35] Aloha Friday officially began in 1966,[36] and young adults of the 1960s embraced the style, replacing the formal business wear favored by previous generations. By 1970, aloha wear had gained acceptance in Hawaii as business attire for any day of the week.[34] Unlike the court dress required in most jurisdictions, attorneys in Hawaii may be allowed to wear aloha shirts in court, though this varies among individual courts.[37]

Hawaii's custom of Aloha Friday slowly spread east to California, continuing around the globe until the 1990s, when it became known as Casual Friday.[34][35] Today in Hawaii, alohawear is worn as business attire for any day of the week,[21] and "Aloha Friday" is generally used to refer to the last day of the work week.[34] Now considered Hawaii's term for "Thank God It's Friday" (TGIF),[38] the phrase was used by Kimo Kahoano and Paul Natto in their 1982 song, "It's Aloha Friday, No Work 'til Monday",[39] heard every Friday on Hawaii radio stations across the state.[citation needed]

Aloha attire Edit

The related concept of "aloha attire" stems from the aloha shirt. Semi-formal functions such as weddings, birthday parties, and dinners are often designated as "aloha attire", meaning that men wear aloha shirts and women wear muumuu or other tropical prints. Because Hawaii tends to be more casual, it is rarely appropriate to attend such functions in full evening wear like on the mainland;[40] instead, aloha attire is seen as a happy medium between excessive formality and casual wear (i.e., business casual).

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Rooted perhaps to the Filipino barong tagalog.[7]
  2. ^ Musa-Shiya was established by Japanese immigrant Chōtarō Miyamoto (宮本長太郎) in 1904. After Miyamoto's death in 1915, the shop was renamed "Musa-Shiya Shoten" (Japanese title: 武蔵屋呉服店 (Musashi-ya-gofukuten) by his son Kōichirō Miyamoto (宮本孝一郎), who sewed Aloha shirts using Japanese kimono fabrics and was allegedly the first to sell shirts of this kind.[14]

References Edit

  1. ^ Via the "Nā Puke Wehewehe ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi". Ulukau: The Hawaiian Electronic Library. from the original on December 10, 2005:
    • "shirt". Hawaiian Dictionary.
    • "shirt". Māmaka Kaiao: A Modern Hawaiian Vocabulary. Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press. 2003.
  2. ^ "Aloha Friday". Maui No Ka 'Oi Magazine. Vol. 11, no. 2. March 2007. Archived from the original on August 8, 2007.
  3. ^ Christian, Scott (March 30, 2017). "The Men's Shirt That Will Get You Noticed". The Wall Street Journal.
  4. ^ a b c Schmitt, Robert C. (1980). "Some Firsts in Island Business and Government" (PDF). The Hawaiian Journal of History. Hawaiian Historical Society. 14: 86–87.; cf. shorter entry in Schmitt, Robert C. (1995). Ronck, Ronn (ed.). Firsts and Almost Firsts in Hawaiʻi. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 101–102. ISBN 978-0-8248-1282-9.
  5. ^ a b Fundaburk (1965), II: 4, p. 169, apud Schimtt (1980)[4]
  6. ^ a b c d e f Keune, Maribeth; Quinn, Brad (July 23, 2010). "Hawaiian Style: The Roots of the Aloha Shirt Interview with Linda Arthur". The Collectors Weekly.
  7. ^ a b c Hirahara, Naomi; Smith, Henrietta M. (2002). Distinguished Asian American Business Leaders. Island Heritage Publishing. p. 43. ISBN 0-89610-406-0.
  8. ^ Goggans, Jan; DiFranco, Aaron (2004). The Pacific Region. Greenwood Publishing. p. 172. ISBN 0-313-33266-5.
  9. ^ Furer (1983), pp. 19–20.
  10. ^ "Tapa_making". www.eua-island-tonga.com. Retrieved June 1, 2023.
  11. ^ Linda B. Arthur in interview, Keane & Quinn (2010),[6] apud Hughes (2017), p. 284
  12. ^ a b c d e Furer (1983), p. 19.
  13. ^ a b c Hope & Tozian (2000), pp. 17, 19 apud Hughes (2017), p. 284
  14. ^ [Aloha Shirt and the history of Japanese immigration]. Japanese Overseas Migration Museum (in Japanese). Japan International Cooperation Agency. 2012. Archived from the original on September 9, 2006. Retrieved October 25, 2012.
  15. ^ Martin, Douglas (June 8, 2000). "Ellery Chun, 91, Popularizer of the Shirt That Won Hawaii". The New York Times. Retrieved August 28, 2014.
  16. ^ Hughes (2017), p. 284.
  17. ^ Hoover, Will (July 11, 2000). "Aloha Shirts Unplugged: Unraveling Some Rumors and Fabrication". Honolulu Advertiser. pp. 21–23.
  18. ^ Musa-Shiya Shoten, Ltd. (June 28, 1935). "'Aloha' Shirts ― well tailored, beautiful designs and radiant colors (advertisement)". Honolulu Advertiser. p. 17.
  19. ^ Ronck, Ronn (April 2, 1987). "Print that Aloha Shirt". Arts Scene. Honolulu Advertiser. p. 21.
  20. ^ Hendrickson, Robert (2001). The Art of the Aloha Shirt. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 10. ISBN 0-471-34518-0.
  21. ^ a b Gordon, Mike (July 2, 2006). . Honolulu Advertiser. pp. 21–23. Archived from the original on February 1, 2012.
  22. ^ Furer (1983), p. 16.
  23. ^ Cheung, Alexis (February 23, 2018). "The Origins and Appropriations of the Aloha Shirt". Racked. Vox Media. from the original on September 26, 2018. Retrieved February 23, 2018.
  24. ^ Hughes (2017), pp. 288–289.
  25. ^ a b Smith, Ray A. (June 7, 2012). "When Designers Meddle With Hawaiian Shirts". The Wall Street Journal. p. D6.
  26. ^ Noland, Claire (January 4, 2009). "Alfred Shaheen, garment industry pioneer, dies at 86". Obituaries. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 4, 2009.
  27. ^ "Tori Richard". San Diego Magazine. Vol. 51. 1998. p. 4. Since 1956.
  28. ^ Fujii, Jocelyn K. (2006). Tori Richard: The First Fifty Years. Honolulu, HI: TR Press. ISBN 0-9785466-0-1. OCLC 128234380.
  29. ^ Padilla, Max (June 20, 2010). "Reyn Spooner's new wave of Hawaiian shirts". Shopping. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 20, 2010.
  30. ^ Miller-Davenport, Sarah (2019). Gateway State: Hawaiʻi and the Cultural Transformation of American Empire. Princeton University Press. p. 170. ISBN 978-0-691-18596-5.
  31. ^ Arthur (2000), pp. 34–35.
  32. ^ . Aloha Festivals. Hawaii Tourism Authority. 2006. Archived from the original on March 21, 2008. Retrieved April 9, 2008.
  33. ^ Arthur (2000), p. 39.
  34. ^ a b c d Brown & Arthur (2002), pp. 78–79.
  35. ^ a b c Hope & Tozian (2000), p. 45.
  36. ^ . June 8, 2006. Archived from the original on September 26, 2006. Mayor Mufi Hannemann: 'When the board of directors of the Chamber of Commerce of Hawaiʻi voted in favor of Aloha Friday in 1966, they were acknowledging a sentiment widespread in our Island home: that we don't have to dress like Mainlanders to be taken seriously. Now the rest of the nation has caught some of the Aloha Friday spirit with "Casual Fridays."'
  37. ^ Ing, Louise K. Y. (January 19, 2011). . www.hawaiilitigation.com. Archived from the original on January 5, 2018. Retrieved January 4, 2018.
  38. ^ Loomis, Susan Herrmann (October 16, 1988). "Shopper's World; Hawaii's Short-Sleeve Plumage". The New York Times. Retrieved June 21, 2008.
  39. ^ Brown, J. J. (September 9, 2007). "Did you ever wonder?". The Gazette. Colorado Springs. Retrieved April 10, 2008.
  40. ^ Dale Hope: The Aloha Shirt with a different year of introduction.[when?]

Further reading Edit

  • Arthur, Linda B. (2000). Aloha Attire: Hawaiian Dress in the Twentieth Century. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publishing. ISBN 0-7643-1015-1.
  • Brown, DeSoto; Arthur, Linda (2002). The Art of the Aloha Shirt. Island Heritage Publishing. ISBN 0-89610-406-0.
  • Fundaburk, Emma Lila (1965). The Garment Manufacturing Industry of Hawaii. Vol. Part II, Vol. 4. University of Hawaii, Economic Research Center.
  • Furer, Gloria (1983), "Designs of Hawaiian Wear: An Evolution in History", ACPTC Proceedings: National meeting proceedings
  • Hope, Dale; Tozian, Gregory (2000). The Aloha Shirt: Spirit of the Islands. Hillsboro, OR: TR Press. ISBN 1-58270-034-6.
  • Hughes, Roxane (2017). "Multicultural or Destitue Hawaii? Re-visioning the Symbolism of the Aloha Shirt". In Ludwig, Sämi (ed.). American Multiculturalism in Context: Views from at Home and Abroad. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 281–300. ISBN 978-1-4438-7482-3.
  • Imbler, Sabrina (August 20, 2019). "The Not-So-Chill History of Hawai'i's Breeziest Shirt". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved July 28, 2023.

External links Edit

  • Time 1926
  • Aloha shirts of the University of Hawaii Museum

aloha, shirt, aloha, shirt, hawaiian, palaka, aloha, also, referred, hawaiian, shirt, style, dress, shirt, originating, hawaii, they, collared, buttoned, dress, shirts, usually, short, sleeved, made, from, printed, fabric, they, traditionally, worn, untucked, . The aloha shirt Hawaiian palaka aloha 1 also referred to as a Hawaiian shirt is a style of dress shirt originating in Hawaii They are collared and buttoned dress shirts usually short sleeved and made from printed fabric They are traditionally worn untucked but can be worn tucked into the waist of trousers They are worn casually or as informal business attire in Hawaii A vintage aloha shirt circa 1960 Aloha Friday or Casual Friday a now common tradition of celebrating the end of the workweek by wearing more casual attire on Fridays initially grew out of an effort to promote aloha shirts 2 Contents 1 Design 2 History 2 1 Exports 3 Aloha dress codes 3 1 Aloha Week 3 2 Aloha Friday 3 3 Aloha attire 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDesign EditAloha dress shirts are printed mostly short sleeved and collared They almost always have buttons sometimes for the entire length of the shirt or at least up to the chest They usually have a left chest pocket sewn in often with attention to ensure the printed pattern remains continuous Aloha shirts may be worn by men or women Women s aloha shirts usually have a lower cut v neck style The lower hems are straight 3 and the shirts are often worn with the shirt tails hanging out rather than tucked in Wearing an untucked shirt was possibly influenced by the local Filipinos who wore shirt tail out and called these bayau meaning friend 5 6 a Wearing it untucked or tucked depends on personal taste it carries the same connotations of tucking or untucking a polo shirt In the 1950s the shirt became allowed as business attire for aloha week but only if worn tucked in 8 9 Traditional men s aloha shirts are usually adorned with traditional Hawaiian quilt designs tapa designs and simple floral patterns in more muted colors Contemporary aloha shirts may have prints that do not feature any traditional Hawaiian quilt or floral designs but instead may incorporate drinks palm trees surf boards or other island tropical elements in a similar form as the traditional aloha shirt 10 It has been observed that locals kamaʻaina tended to shy away from the garishness of aloha shirts as too wild when they first appeared 11 whereas tourists embraced wearing designs of many bright colors 6 An example of the type of shirt the locals may prefer includes the reverse print these shirts are often printed on the interior resulting in the muted color on the exterior citation needed History Edit Quilt made from vintage aloha shirt fabric circa 1960sAccording to some sources the origin of aloha shirts can be traced to the 1920s 12 or the early 1930s 13 when the Honolulu based dry goods store Musa Shiya the Shirtmaker under the proprietorship of Kōichirō Miyamoto 13 started making shirts out of colorful Japanese prints b 12 13 It has also been contended that the aloha shirt was devised in the early 1930s by Chinese merchant Ellery Chun of King Smith Clothiers and Dry Goods a store in Waikiki 15 16 Although this claim has been described as a myth reinforced by repeated telling 17 Chun may have been the first to mass produce 7 or to maintain the ready to wear in stock to be sold off the shelf 4 5 The name aloha shirt appeared later By 1935 and 1936 the word aloha was being attached to various sorts of Hawaiian products so calling the garments aloha shirts was hardly original 12 The term aloha shirt first appeared in print in an advertisement for Musa Shiya in the June 28 1935 issue of The Honolulu Advertiser newspaper 12 18 However Ellery Chun is sometimes credited for coining the term 19 perhaps in 1933 20 Chun s store reportedly carried window signs that said aloha shirts 7 21 The term aloha sportswear was registered as a trademark by Chun s company in 1936 12 4 followed by Chun trademarking Aloha Shirt in 1937 and owning the rights to this appellation for the next 20 years 22 Tori Richard aloha shirts in a storeWithin years major designer labels sprang up all over Hawaii and began manufacturing and selling aloha shirts en masse By the end of the 1930s 450 people were employed in an industry worth 600 000 annually 23 Two notable manufacturers of this period are Kamehameha and Branfleet later Kahala both founded in 1936 24 6 Retail chains in Hawaii including some based on the mainland may mass produce a single aloha shirt design for employee uniforms After World War II many servicemen and servicewomen returned to the United States from Asia and the Pacific islands with aloha shirts made in Hawaii since the 1930s 25 One significant manufacturer was Shaheen which began business in 1948 6 Following Hawaii s statehood in 1959 when extant tropical prints came to be regarded as rather tacky designer Alfred Shaheen became noted for producing aloha shirts of higher chic and quality and Elvis Presley wore a Shaheen designed red aloha on the album cover for Blue Hawaii 1961 25 26 In 1956 Tori Richard a well known brand of alohas was established 27 28 Spooner s of Waikiki precursor of Reyn Spooner also established business in 1956 29 Exports Edit Garments manufactured in Hawaii could bear Made in Hawaii labels before statehood 1959 and even afterwards their sales to mainland United States continued to be referred to as exports 30 Aloha shirts tend to be referred to as Hawaiian shirts by the populace from the mainland United States 6 and are often brilliantly colored with floral patterns or generic Polynesian motifs citation needed The aloha shirt is currently when the premier textile export of the Hawaii manufacturing industry citation needed Aloha dress codes EditAloha Week Edit Man with a typical aloha shirt during the Aloha Festivals Floral Parade 2012In 1946 the Honolulu Chamber of Commerce funded a study of aloha shirts and designs for comfortable business clothing worn during the hot Hawaiian summers The City and County of Honolulu passed a resolution allowing their employees to wear sport shirts from June October City employees were not allowed to wear aloha shirts for business until the creation of the Aloha Week festival in 1947 The Aloha Week festival was motivated by both cultural and economic concerns First held at Ala Moana Park in October the festival revived interest in ancient Hawaiian music dancing sports and traditions There was a holoku ball a floral parade and a makahiki festival attended by 8 000 people Economically the week long event first attracted visitors during October traditionally a slow month for tourism which benefited the Hawaiian fashion industry as they supplied the muʻumuʻu and aloha shirts worn for the celebration 31 Aloha Week expanded in 1974 to six islands and was lengthened to a month In 1991 Aloha Week was renamed to Aloha Festivals 32 In the end Aloha Week had a direct influence on the resulting demand for alohawear and was responsible for supporting local clothing manufacturing locals needed the clothing for the festivals and soon people in Hawaii began wearing the clothing in greater numbers on more of a daily basis Hawaii s fashion industry was relieved as they were initially worried that popular clothing from the mainland United States would eventually replace aloha attire 33 Aloha Friday Edit In 1962 a professional manufacturing association known as the Hawaiian Fashion Guild began to promote aloha shirts and clothing for use in the workplace particularly as business attire In a campaign called Operation Liberation the Guild distributed two aloha shirts to every member of the Hawaii House of Representatives and the Hawaii Senate Subsequently a resolution passed in the Senate recommending aloha attire be worn throughout the summer beginning on Lei Day 34 The wording of the resolution spoke of letting the male populace return to aloha attire during the summer months for the sake of comfort and in support of the 50th state s garment industry 35 In 1965 Bill Foster Sr president of the Hawaii Fashion Guild led the organization in a campaign lobbying for Aloha Friday a day employers would allow men to wear aloha shirts on the last business day of the week a few months out of the year 35 Aloha Friday officially began in 1966 36 and young adults of the 1960s embraced the style replacing the formal business wear favored by previous generations By 1970 aloha wear had gained acceptance in Hawaii as business attire for any day of the week 34 Unlike the court dress required in most jurisdictions attorneys in Hawaii may be allowed to wear aloha shirts in court though this varies among individual courts 37 Hawaii s custom of Aloha Friday slowly spread east to California continuing around the globe until the 1990s when it became known as Casual Friday 34 35 Today in Hawaii alohawear is worn as business attire for any day of the week 21 and Aloha Friday is generally used to refer to the last day of the work week 34 Now considered Hawaii s term for Thank God It s Friday TGIF 38 the phrase was used by Kimo Kahoano and Paul Natto in their 1982 song It s Aloha Friday No Work til Monday 39 heard every Friday on Hawaii radio stations across the state citation needed Aloha attire Edit The related concept of aloha attire stems from the aloha shirt Semi formal functions such as weddings birthday parties and dinners are often designated as aloha attire meaning that men wear aloha shirts and women wear muumuu or other tropical prints Because Hawaii tends to be more casual it is rarely appropriate to attend such functions in full evening wear like on the mainland 40 instead aloha attire is seen as a happy medium between excessive formality and casual wear i e business casual See also EditBarong tagalog formal Filipino shirt made of pineapple fiber Batik Indonesian and Malaysian shirt worn casually or as business attire Bowling shirt Camp shirt Guayabera Mexican Central American and Caribbean shirt worn casually or as business attire Kariyushi shirt Okinawan shirt worn casually or as business attire Tori Richard aloha shirt brand Reyn Spooner aloha shirt brand Jams aloha shirt brandNotes Edit Rooted perhaps to the Filipino barong tagalog 7 Musa Shiya was established by Japanese immigrant Chōtarō Miyamoto 宮本長太郎 in 1904 After Miyamoto s death in 1915 the shop was renamed Musa Shiya Shoten Japanese title 武蔵屋呉服店 Musashi ya gofukuten by his son Kōichirō Miyamoto 宮本孝一郎 who sewed Aloha shirts using Japanese kimono fabrics and was allegedly the first to sell shirts of this kind 14 References Edit Via the Na Puke Wehewehe ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi Ulukau The Hawaiian Electronic Library Archived from the original on December 10 2005 shirt Hawaiian Dictionary shirt Mamaka Kaiao A Modern Hawaiian Vocabulary Honolulu University of Hawaiʻi Press 2003 Aloha Friday Maui No Ka Oi Magazine Vol 11 no 2 March 2007 Archived from the original on August 8 2007 Christian Scott March 30 2017 The Men s Shirt That Will Get You Noticed The Wall Street Journal a b c Schmitt Robert C 1980 Some Firsts in Island Business and Government PDF The Hawaiian Journal of History Hawaiian Historical Society 14 86 87 cf shorter entry in Schmitt Robert C 1995 Ronck Ronn ed Firsts and Almost Firsts in Hawaiʻi University of Hawaii Press pp 101 102 ISBN 978 0 8248 1282 9 a b Fundaburk 1965 II 4 p 169 apud Schimtt 1980 4 a b c d e f Keune Maribeth Quinn Brad July 23 2010 Hawaiian Style The Roots of the Aloha Shirt Interview with Linda Arthur The Collectors Weekly a b c Hirahara Naomi Smith Henrietta M 2002 Distinguished Asian American Business Leaders Island Heritage Publishing p 43 ISBN 0 89610 406 0 Goggans Jan DiFranco Aaron 2004 The Pacific Region Greenwood Publishing p 172 ISBN 0 313 33266 5 Furer 1983 pp 19 20 Tapa making www eua island tonga com Retrieved June 1 2023 Linda B Arthur in interview Keane amp Quinn 2010 6 apud Hughes 2017 p 284 a b c d e Furer 1983 p 19 a b c Hope amp Tozian 2000 pp 17 19 apud Hughes 2017 p 284 Aroha shatsu to nihonjin imin no rekishi アロハシャツと日本人移民の歴史 Aloha Shirt and the history of Japanese immigration Japanese Overseas Migration Museum in Japanese Japan International Cooperation Agency 2012 Archived from the original on September 9 2006 Retrieved October 25 2012 Martin Douglas June 8 2000 Ellery Chun 91 Popularizer of the Shirt That Won Hawaii The New York Times Retrieved August 28 2014 Hughes 2017 p 284 Hoover Will July 11 2000 Aloha Shirts Unplugged Unraveling Some Rumors and Fabrication Honolulu Advertiser pp 21 23 Musa Shiya Shoten Ltd June 28 1935 Aloha Shirts well tailored beautiful designs and radiant colors advertisement Honolulu Advertiser p 17 Ronck Ronn April 2 1987 Print that Aloha Shirt Arts Scene Honolulu Advertiser p 21 Hendrickson Robert 2001 The Art of the Aloha Shirt John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 10 ISBN 0 471 34518 0 a b Gordon Mike July 2 2006 Aloha shirts Honolulu Advertiser pp 21 23 Archived from the original on February 1 2012 Furer 1983 p 16 Cheung Alexis February 23 2018 The Origins and Appropriations of the Aloha Shirt Racked Vox Media Archived from the original on September 26 2018 Retrieved February 23 2018 Hughes 2017 pp 288 289 a b Smith Ray A June 7 2012 When Designers Meddle With Hawaiian Shirts The Wall Street Journal p D6 Noland Claire January 4 2009 Alfred Shaheen garment industry pioneer dies at 86 Obituaries Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 4 2009 Tori Richard San Diego Magazine Vol 51 1998 p 4 Since 1956 Fujii Jocelyn K 2006 Tori Richard The First Fifty Years Honolulu HI TR Press ISBN 0 9785466 0 1 OCLC 128234380 Padilla Max June 20 2010 Reyn Spooner s new wave of Hawaiian shirts Shopping Los Angeles Times Retrieved June 20 2010 Miller Davenport Sarah 2019 Gateway State Hawaiʻi and the Cultural Transformation of American Empire Princeton University Press p 170 ISBN 978 0 691 18596 5 Arthur 2000 pp 34 35 A Cultural Showcase of Hawaii Aloha Festivals Hawaii Tourism Authority 2006 Archived from the original on March 21 2008 Retrieved April 9 2008 Arthur 2000 p 39 a b c d Brown amp Arthur 2002 pp 78 79 a b c Hope amp Tozian 2000 p 45 Wear Aloha Exhibit Opens At Honolulu Hale June 8 2006 Archived from the original on September 26 2006 Mayor Mufi Hannemann When the board of directors of the Chamber of Commerce of Hawaiʻi voted in favor of Aloha Friday in 1966 they were acknowledging a sentiment widespread in our Island home that we don t have to dress like Mainlanders to be taken seriously Now the rest of the nation has caught some of the Aloha Friday spirit with Casual Fridays Ing Louise K Y January 19 2011 AHFI Insights What Not to Wear Hawaiʻi Lawyers Edition www hawaiilitigation com Archived from the original on January 5 2018 Retrieved January 4 2018 Loomis Susan Herrmann October 16 1988 Shopper s World Hawaii s Short Sleeve Plumage The New York Times Retrieved June 21 2008 Brown J J September 9 2007 Did you ever wonder The Gazette Colorado Springs Retrieved April 10 2008 Dale Hope The Aloha Shirt with a different year of introduction when Further reading EditArthur Linda B 2000 Aloha Attire Hawaiian Dress in the Twentieth Century Atglen PA Schiffer Publishing ISBN 0 7643 1015 1 Brown DeSoto Arthur Linda 2002 The Art of the Aloha Shirt Island Heritage Publishing ISBN 0 89610 406 0 Fundaburk Emma Lila 1965 The Garment Manufacturing Industry of Hawaii Vol Part II Vol 4 University of Hawaii Economic Research Center Furer Gloria 1983 Designs of Hawaiian Wear An Evolution in History ACPTC Proceedings National meeting proceedings Hope Dale Tozian Gregory 2000 The Aloha Shirt Spirit of the Islands Hillsboro OR TR Press ISBN 1 58270 034 6 Hughes Roxane 2017 Multicultural or Destitue Hawaii Re visioning the Symbolism of the Aloha Shirt In Ludwig Sami ed American Multiculturalism in Context Views from at Home and Abroad Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 281 300 ISBN 978 1 4438 7482 3 Imbler Sabrina August 20 2019 The Not So Chill History of Hawai i s Breeziest Shirt Atlas Obscura Retrieved July 28 2023 External links Edit Look up aloha shirt in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aloha shirts Musa Shiya The Shirtmaker Time 1926 Aloha shirts of the University of Hawaii Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aloha shirt amp oldid 1168638487, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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