Made-in-USA Navy Baseball Score Club Tie
- 100% Silk
- 3 1/4" width
- Made in USA
- Code breaker: "5-to-4, Bottom of the Fifth, One Out, No one On"
We’re excited to carry this collection of ties from legendary Ivy outfitter, Chipp. Founded in 1947 by J. Press veterans Sidney Winston and Lou Praeger, Chipp is credited with creating what Tom Wolfe dubbed “Go to Hell” Ivy style. Today, Sidney's son, Paul, carries on the Chipp tradition through this legacy line of ties that features some of Chipp’s most famous (or, in some cases, infamous) motifs: cheeky, coded symbols sneakily set against sober, conservative –and wearable– backgrounds. Go to Hell? We prefer to think of it as “camouflaged subversion.”
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns

Made-in-USA Navy Baseball Score Club Tie
Made-in-USA Navy Baseball Score Club Tie
- 100% Silk
- 3 1/4" width
- Made in USA
- Code breaker: "5-to-4, Bottom of the Fifth, One Out, No one On"
We’re excited to carry this collection of ties from legendary Ivy outfitter, Chipp. Founded in 1947 by J. Press veterans Sidney Winston and Lou Praeger, Chipp is credited with creating what Tom Wolfe dubbed “Go to Hell” Ivy style. Today, Sidney's son, Paul, carries on the Chipp tradition through this legacy line of ties that features some of Chipp’s most famous (or, in some cases, infamous) motifs: cheeky, coded symbols sneakily set against sober, conservative –and wearable– backgrounds. Go to Hell? We prefer to think of it as “camouflaged subversion.”
Original: $98.00
-70%$98.00
$29.40Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
- 100% Silk
- 3 1/4" width
- Made in USA
- Code breaker: "5-to-4, Bottom of the Fifth, One Out, No one On"
We’re excited to carry this collection of ties from legendary Ivy outfitter, Chipp. Founded in 1947 by J. Press veterans Sidney Winston and Lou Praeger, Chipp is credited with creating what Tom Wolfe dubbed “Go to Hell” Ivy style. Today, Sidney's son, Paul, carries on the Chipp tradition through this legacy line of ties that features some of Chipp’s most famous (or, in some cases, infamous) motifs: cheeky, coded symbols sneakily set against sober, conservative –and wearable– backgrounds. Go to Hell? We prefer to think of it as “camouflaged subversion.”











