The sweater vest is back.
OK, it never really went away. But it took presidential candidate Rick Santorum to remind us that the comfy sleeveless sweater has always had a place in our closets.
Ever since Santorum won the Iowa caucus, the former senator from Pennsylvania has been wearing a sweater vest at his meet-and-greets, not for a fashion statement but for good luck.
After offering a free vest to anyone contributing $100 to his campaign, Santorum searched for a U.S. manufacturer to make them. Bemidji Woolen Mills in northern Minnesota landed the job. The company shipped the first batch of 1,000 and has already started a second run, said mill president Bill Batchelder.
Batchelder said the vests convey Main Street values -- and he brushed away any suggestion they also have a nerd factor.
"Say what you want, but Sen. Santorum was not wearing high-water pants or a pocket protector when he came into the plant," said Batchelder, a vest wearer himself.
Sam Fehrenbach, buyer at Martin Patrick in Minneapolis, said the high-fashion men's clothier didn't stock any vests last year, but has them on order for the fall. For Fehrenbach, the old-fashioned look of the vests is part of their appeal.
"The vest has longevity, even if it can be a bit grandpa-ish," he said. While he readily admitted that "vests are a bit nerdy," he added, "but I don't see that as a downside. Nerds can be fashionable, too."