Itâs as central to Bob Dylan as a harmonica â it is, of course, a scarf, Dylanâs preferred accessory, and one that has become a go-to for TimothÊe Chalamet, who has been wearing them constantly since filming the Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown. But the brown, bedraggled scarf scrunched around his neck at the beginning of the film, as a young and carefree Dylan, isnât quite what it seems. According to costume designer Arianne Phillips, the well-worn shawl was a last-minute fix. âWe had a hard time making [our original scarf] look authentically raggedy,â she says. âSo that was actually a piece of blanket that we found at a charity shop. That was very last-minute â we did everything on the spot, leading up to the final moments where Timmy was walking on set, to give it that aged look.â
Otherwise itâs Dylanâs trademark denim, boots and hair that unify each era of his low-key yet instantly recognisable clothing style, says Phillips. As the costume designer on James Mangoldâs film â currently topping the UK box office â she was tasked with showing the subtle progression of the rock veteranâs wardrobe. Through Chalamet â who plays him with a winning mix of arrogance and indifference â we see Dylan evolve from scraggly, scruffy young kid, to an aloof mod in Wayfarers in line with his growing fame. Recreating iconic looks â from his Freewheelinâ album cover to the leather jacket and super-skinny jeans he sported on stage at the Newport folk festival in 1965, at the peak of the electric Dylan controversy â we see his fashions change over time. By the end of the film heâs drawing sartorially and musically from across the Atlantic â inspired by the likes of the Kinks and the Beatles â and even beginning to dabble with colour and playful polka dots.
Getting the right jeans required painstaking research. While Dylan wore Leviâs in real life â as Chalamet does in the film â it was impossible to track down the exact style he had worn in 1965 when he was seen by many to be straying from his folksy roots. What were these skinny jeans that Dylan had worn, which Phillips describes as âstovepipe thin jeansâ?
Aiming to be as authentic as possible â Dylan supported the film but did not advise â Phillips followed her research to the head of Leviâsâ vintage division, who confirmed that Dylan was wearing a type of jeans called âSuper Slimsâ on stage at Newport. The company had manufactured the style during a small window in the 1960s. âWe just couldnât [find them] â so they offered to remake them for us.â
Inspired by his folk heroes including Woody Guthrie, and âthe Americana dust bowl everymanâ, Dylan started off in baggy styles, embodying the DIY spirit of the era. âTheyâre like paintersâ pants,â says Phillips. âA denim work pant.â Things begin to get slimmer with his 1963 album, The Freewheelinâ Bob Dylan, where Phillips assumed that the musician was in Leviâs 501s (albeit a pair with a small homemade bootcut modification made by Dylanâs then-girlfriend Suze Rotolo, to get them over his shoes, a detail Phillips gleaned from reading Rotoloâs memoir).
Of course, Dylan wouldnât be complete without his sunglasses, which were bought from a Los Angeles vintage store specialising in eyewear, and are from the brand Bausch and Lomb, who went on to create the iconic Ray-Bans.
The significance of denim is key, and Phillips, who received Bafta and Oscar nominations earlier this month for her work on the film, is no stranger to sourcing period pieces. âWhen I did [Quentin Tarantinoâs] Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, I purposely put all the Manson family in denim, because it was countercultural, and frowned upon in certain public spaces,â she says. As for Dylan, she says he wore the fabric âconsistently âĻ it was a representation of the youth movement in the 60sâ.
There was also a starring role for real vintage clothing, sourced from flea markets, dealers, and even Etsy. The embroidered, faux fur-trimmed suede coat worn by Elle Fanning as Sylvie Russo, a character based on Rotolo, was sourced from that website. âTwo-thirds of Timmyâs costumes were made for him, and then the last third were very special vintage pieces,â Phillips says. These included workwear, and âan American Pendleton [plaid] shirt, which is impossible to recreate; I wouldnât want to â it has that hang and that feel.â Plus, says Phillips, actors move differently in older corduroy, hopsack and moleskin, compared with modern fabrics.
after newsletter promotion
Creating authentic reproductions was crucial for Phillips and her 40-strong team, from getting a cobbler to meticulously recreate Dylanâs Chelsea boots to recreating the knitwear worn by his mentor, Pete Seeger, which was originally made by his wife, Toshi. But Phillips credits the âbreakdown artistsâ, whose job it is to distress the clothes. They are the people, she says, who âreally give texture and depth to the story weâre tellingâ.