Page 1 of 1
Five cheap crapophones in Austin
Posted: Wed Apr 22, 2015 1:16 am
by Meltrope3
http://austin.craigslist.org/atq/4956564861.html
Not mine. These belong to a vintage-revival haberdashery, Dandy's, which caters mainly to a young, hipsterish clientele.
(Actually, I've bought a few things there myself, though I'm neither a hipster nor young.)
(Such as: a shaving mug and a bow tie.)
But I'm puzzled...much of what I've read about hipsterism emphasizes the search for authenticity, rediscovery of craft traditions and similar ideas. So what in heaven's name is this most hipsterish of boutiques doing with enough crapophones to ballast a ship?
Re: Five cheap crapophones in Austin
Posted: Wed Apr 22, 2015 7:40 am
by De Soto Frank
I am probably far from an authority in hipsters, but the uber-hipster coffee-shop crowd around here are usually cash-poor, and likely can't afford real external-horn machines...
Besides, Gram-o-phones won't play vinyl...

Re: Five cheap crapophones in Austin
Posted: Wed Apr 22, 2015 11:29 am
by brianu
Meltrope3 wrote:But I'm puzzled...much of what I've read about hipsterism emphasizes the search for authenticity, rediscovery of craft traditions and similar ideas. So what in heaven's name is this most hipsterish of boutiques doing with enough crapophones to ballast a ship?
I don't think so-called hipsters are really inclined toward the "authentic" in terms of historical correctness and accuracy (at least a few have asked me about playing their vinyl on a victrola)... if anything, they seem mostly drawn to an amalgam of styles from various periods, certain elements of clothing, music, "taste," etc., that symbolize or refer to something else/earlier that's no longer deemed generally mainstream... provided of course that those elements are generally accepted by the same hipster peers from which the hipster also typically seeks to distinguish him/herself for purposes of asserting or maintaining personal or individual "authenticity." thus the conundrum.
See...
http://www.thepubscout.com/the-best-of/ ... -of-irony/
Re: Five cheap crapophones in Austin
Posted: Wed Apr 22, 2015 11:51 am
by De Soto Frank
That's a riot !
Thanks, Brian !
Re: Five cheap crapophones in Austin
Posted: Wed Apr 22, 2015 1:11 pm
by Mr Grumpy
brianu wrote:
I don't think so-called hipsters are really inclined toward the "authentic" in terms of historical correctness and accuracy (at least a few have asked me about playing their vinyl on a victrola)... if anything, they seem mostly drawn to an amalgam of styles from various periods, certain elements of clothing, music, "taste," etc., that symbolize or refer to something else/earlier that's no longer deemed generally mainstream... provided of course that those elements are generally accepted by the same hipster peers from which the hipster also typically seeks to distinguish him/herself for purposes of asserting or maintaining personal or individual "authenticity." thus the conundrum.
See...
http://www.thepubscout.com/the-best-of/ ... -of-irony/
Brilliant.

Re: Five cheap crapophones in Austin
Posted: Wed Apr 22, 2015 3:42 pm
by Meltrope3
Yes, a brilliant social critique. I'm beginning to fear that these five crapophones are but the outer symptoms of a deeper spiritual malady that is gnawing at the very fibre of civilization...

Re: Five cheap crapophones in Austin
Posted: Thu Apr 23, 2015 3:24 am
by Lucius1958
brianu wrote:Meltrope3 wrote:But I'm puzzled...much of what I've read about hipsterism emphasizes the search for authenticity, rediscovery of craft traditions and similar ideas. So what in heaven's name is this most hipsterish of boutiques doing with enough crapophones to ballast a ship?
I don't think so-called hipsters are really inclined toward the "authentic" in terms of historical correctness and accuracy (at least a few have asked me about playing their vinyl on a victrola)... if anything, they seem mostly drawn to an amalgam of styles from various periods, certain elements of clothing, music, "taste," etc., that symbolize or refer to something else/earlier that's no longer deemed generally mainstream... provided of course that those elements are generally accepted by the same hipster peers from which the hipster also typically seeks to distinguish him/herself for purposes of asserting or maintaining personal or individual "authenticity." thus the conundrum.
See...
http://www.thepubscout.com/the-best-of/ ... -of-irony/
True: the Hipster wants to be a rebel and nonconformist....
...
just like everyone else in his group.
Bill