It sits quietly at the center back of millions of dress shirts, rarely noticed and rarely used. That small fabric tab — officially called a locker loop — has a history that runs from the tight quarters of naval warships to the social rituals of 1960s American prep schools.
En bref
- —The loop is called a locker loop, born from military necessity
- —Ivy League students turned it into a fashion and social symbol in the 1960s
- —Girlfriends would thread scarves through it to signal a boyfriend was taken
A Navy invention born from cramped ship quarters
The locker loop’s story begins aboard military vessels. Sailors and Marines living on ships in the early-to-mid 20th century had almost no closet space — just hooks in cramped locker rooms and narrow ship cabins.
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