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Bigsby & Kruthers : ウィキペディア英語版
Bigsby & Kruthers

Bigsby & Kruthers was a high profile men's clothier in Chicago for 30 years from 1970 to 2000. The privately held company was founded by Joe Silverberg, joined shortly thereafter by his brother, H. Gene Silverberg, who both got their start as children working on Maxwell Street. The chain started as a small jeans and menswear surplus store on Broadway and Briar St., and at its peak there were upscale suit stores in prime locations on the Magnificent Mile, Lincoln Park (1750 N. Clark Street), Water Tower Place, 10 S. LaSalle Street, Oakbrook Center, and Northbrook Court (with a focus on women's wear). Other locations had opened and closed (or moved), including Diversey Pkwy. near Clark St., Woodfield Mall, Brickyard Mall, an outlet store in Gurnee Mills, a Dallas, Texas store that opened in 1986, and a franchise in Madison, Wisconsin.〔("BIGSBY BRACES FOR RIVALS WITH MAG MILE MOVE" ) (Background) ''Crain's Chicago Business'', Feb 6, 1995. Retrieved May 2013.〕〔("Bigsby & Kruthers To Expand" ) (Dallas) ''Chicago Tribune'', Jan 13, 1986. Retrieved May 2013.〕〔("Shop Talk - When Gene And Joe Silverberg Talk Clothes, The City's Influential Men (and Women) Listen." ) (Background, Celebrity) ''Chicago Tribune'', Mar 3, 1993. Retrieved May 2013.〕〔("Bigsby Revival - Freed Press Release 2009" ) (Revival, Awards, Celebrity) Joseph Freed and Associates - Block 37 New Leases, Press Release, March 25, 2009〕
The image Bigsby & Kruthers portrayed was more European tailored and fashion-forward than more traditional competitors, such as Paul Stuart.〔
In addition to their fashion and service, the chain was recognized for innovative and award winning store design (including large tie walls), marketing, and celebrity affiliation. Advertising included a widely reported traffic stopping multi-sided mural on their warehouse building along the Kennedy Expressway, a series of "Suit Books" containing Chicago celebrity photo portraits, radio, television, other print and billboards. Bigsby & Kruthers was also known for its Chicago celebrity clients, including major sports figures (notably Michael Jordan, Dennis Rodman, Phil Jackson, Frank Thomas, Sammy Sosa, and Chicago Bears), newscasters, politicians, actors, and CEO's. B&K received national and international attention and was the subject of numerous articles in publications such as ''Esquire'', ''The Wall Street Journal'', ''Business Week'', ''Forbes'', ''The New York Times'', and ''GQ''. ''Esquire Magazine'' named Bigsby and Kruthers one of the top ten specialty retailers in the United States. The Silverbergs appeared on national and local television programs such as NBC's ''The Today Show''. In popular culture, a faux Bigsby & Kruthers storefront is visible in the mall car chase scene in ''The Blues Brothers''.〔〔("Top Honors - Chain Store Age - 1996 Retail Store of the Year" ) (Awards) ''Chain Store Age'', Feb97, Vol. 73 Issue 2, p12RSO. Retrieved May 2013.〕〔("Whatever Suits The Coach" ) (Celebrity) ''SunSentinel'', Jan 22, 1998. Retrieved May 2013.〕〔("This Traffic Stopper Is A Face That Can Halt 1,000 Cars" ) (Mural) ''Chicago Tribune'', Feb 26, 1996. Retrieved May 2013.〕〔("Bigsby & Kruthers Salutes Creativity With Some Creativity Of Its Own" ) (Suit Book) ''Chicago Tribune'', Dec 14, 1988. Retrieved May 2013.〕〔("Bigsby & Kruthers Closing 2 Downtown Stores" ) ''Chicago Tribune'', October 03, 1998. Retrieved Aug 2013.〕〔(Blues Brother's movie still pic ) (Blues's Brothers). Retrieved May 2013.〕
In 1989 B&K launched Knot Shop (originally "Knot Krazy"), a now defunct national chain of 35 tie stores that also sold scarves and boxer shorts, and that employed Monica Lewinsky before she became a White House intern.〔("Bigsby To Launch Tie-in To Clothier" ) (Knot Shop) ''Chicago Tribune'', Mar 13, 1989. Retrieved May 2013.〕〔("Monica Lewinsky and her knotty ties to men's wear" ) (Lewinsky) ''Daily News Record'', Feb 4, 1998. Retrieved May 2013.〕
The company was also principally involved in Bigsby's Bar & Grill, Michael Jordan's Restaurant, and various licensing deals.〔("Apparel Lines Have Jordan`s Number" ) (Licensing) ''Chicago Tribune'', Nov 12, 1990. Retrieved May 2013.〕
The closing of the chain was largely attributed to the trend in casual dressing that also forced the closing of many of its competitors, and the fact that B&K had always been highly leveraged.〔
== References ==



抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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