

Personalized Bar ApronĪ leather apron isn’t only for those within the bartending profession. Why not have a stylish apron as your uniform? Not only will it enhance your branding and overall look, imagine how good your staff will feel with such stylish uniform. Not only is a leather apron stylish on its own but adding a company logo enhances the branding and makes the overall appearance of a hip bar even trendier.Ĭustomised with your bar’s logo on, your staff will impress. With this rise in the need for protective and stylish clothing for the bartending community, comes a rise in demand for custom aprons. So, the need for a bartender to protect their clothing is only rising.
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There are many bars now that offer exciting and experimental drinks that involve flames, dry ice and edible glitters and dyes in order to impress and create a memorable night for the customer. Most bartenders wear aprons in order to protect their clothing from splashes that occur when mixing drinks. Not only this but prohibition themed bars and restaurants are an ever-growing trend.Īprons are designed to protect the clothing of the person wearing it. Many of today’s most famous and popular cocktails such as the Long Island Iced Tea and the Gin & Tonic came from this era. Bartenders were given an aura of mystery and power, often friendly with (and paid well by) the gangsters who owned these bars and clubs. In the 1920s, prohibition only grew the desire to seek out a place to drink, dance and socialise. This considered them part of the social elite as they could afford to own property with the money they earned from selling these drinks. There is recorded evidence from the time of Julius Caesar’s reign and from even earlier in Ancient Greece of public drinking houses where people went to socialise, be entertained and served drinks poured by craftsmen.īy the Middle Ages, bartending had grown into a full-time profession, mainly occupied by alehouse owners and female innkeepers who brewed their own drinks such as wine and mead. It’s history dates back to Ancient Roman, Greek and Asian societies. Bartending is one of the oldest (and arguably most respected) professions.
