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In clothing, the suit is a set of clothes made of the same fabric, usually consisting of at least a jacket and trousers. The sitting room setting (also known as business settings when not wearing color and style), originally from England as a state outfit, is the most common Western dress style. Another type of setting currently in use is the dinner suit , part of the black tie, which appears as an alternative to unwind to wear a suit in much the same way as daytime suits come in to replace a suit and morning coat ; and, rarely worn today, morning clothes. This article discusses casual wear (including business suits), informal dress code elements.

Variations in designs, pieces, and fabrics, such as two and three pieces, or single- and double-breasted, determine social appropriateness and garment work. Often, clothing is worn, as is traditional, with a collared shirt and tie. Until about the 1960s, as well as other men's clothing, hats will also be worn when the wearer is outdoors. The suit also comes with different cuts: two-piece suit has a jacket and trousers; three pieces added vests (known as vests in North America); Further pieces may include flat hats made of the same fabric.

Initially, like most clothes, a tailor made a suit from the fabric of his client's choice; this is now often known as the ordered setting. The suit was tailored to the size, taste, and style of the man. Since the Industrial Revolution, most clothing is mass-produced, and, as such, is sold as ready-made clothing (although changes by tailor before it is common). Currently, clothing is sold in four ways:

  • bespoke , where the garment is tailor made by the tailor from a pattern made entirely of customer size, providing the most suitable and free choice of fabric;
  • is made to measure , where the pre-made pattern is modified to fit the customer, and the choice of limited options and fabrics is available;
  • ready-to-wear or off-the-peg (off-the-rack, in American English), sold ready to be customized or eventually available;
  • separate settings where jackets and trousers are sold separately, allowing customers to choose the best size for them and to limit the number of required changes.


Video Suit (clothing)



Histori

The style is now established in the industrial revolution of the late 18th century, which sharply transformed elaborate formal garments embroidered and gems into simpler clothing from British rule, which gradually evolved into the naked formality of the Victorian era. It was in search of more comfort that the loosening of rules spawned in the late 19th century into modern leisure suits.

Brooks Brothers are generally credited with the first offering of "ready made" suits, sold suits already manufactured and sized, ready to fit. Haggar Clothing is the first to introduce the concept of a separate suit in the US, the concept of a jacket and trousers sold separately, which are found in many markets today.

Maps Suit (clothing)



Etymology

The word suit comes from the French suite , which means "following", from some Latin Latin derivative form Latin word sequour = "I follow", because component garments (jackets and trousers and vests) follow each other and have the same fabric and color and are worn together.

As a suit (in this sense) encompasses all or most of the wearer's body, the term "suit" extends to a single, covering all or most of the body, such as swimsuits and wetsuits and space clothing (see Suit (disambiguation) ).

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Part of settings

There are many possible variations in style selection, clothing and detail suits.

Cutting

The jacket silhouette is the outline. The adjustable balance made from canvas fittings allows balanced silhouettes so that the jacket does not need to be buttoned and the clothes are not too tight or too loose. Appropriate clothing is formed from the neck to the chest and shoulders to hang without wrinkles from tension. Shapes are an important part of sewing that often requires handwork from scratch. The two main deductions are 1) double-breasted , a conservative design with two button columns, spanned by large overlaps on the left and right sides; and 2) single-breasted clothing, where the sides are very overlapping, with one button column.

Good sewing anywhere in the world is characterized by very narrow side and shoulders, whereas often layered shelves are used to reduce labor. Casual clothes are more characterized by less construction and sewing, as the sack suit is a loose American style.

There are 3 ways to make clothes:

  1. Ready to create and change "size" or precut shape; comfort that is often expressed over time with wrinkles from poor formation, which causes distortion;
  2. Settings created using measurements, not shaping, to achieve things like style, length and horizontal measurements;
  3. Custom, bespoke or custom designed customs that have temporary semi-finished fittings and are cut from the actual personal pattern.

The original standard acid adjustment test is a wrinkle that comes from a bad tailor. Complicated can be suppressed. For the interim fitting, "Rock Of Eye" (which means practicing free hands based on experienced artistic eyes to match the item with the wearer, trusting the eye over the unyielding script approach), drawing and cutting the inaccuracies overcome by installation.

Fabric

Clothing is made in various fabrics, but most often from wool. The two main threads produce wool (where the fibers are combed before spinning to produce a soft, hard cloth) and wool (where it does not, thus retains a relatively smooth texture). It can be woven in a number of ways to produce flannel, tweed, gabardin, and fresco among others. All of these fabrics have different weights and shades, and some fabrics have S (or Super S) numbers that describe the fineness of the fiber as measured by the average fiber diameter, for example, Super 120; however, finer, finer fabrics and thus tend not to be long used. Although wool is traditionally associated with warm and thick clothing intended to ward off cold weather, advances in making finer and finer fibers have made woolen clothing acceptable for warmer weather, as the fabric has become lighter and more flexible. Wool fabric is represented by the weight of a square piece of yard; thus, heavier wool, suitable only for winter, is 12-14 oz.; medium, "three seasons" (ie, excluding summer) is 10-11 oz.; and summer wool 7-8 oz. (In the days before central heating, heavier wool such as 16 oz.Used in suits: now used mainly in coat and overcoat.) Other materials are used sometimes, either alone or mixed with wool, such as cashmere. Silk alone or mixed with wool is sometimes used. Synthetic materials, while cheaper, for example, polyester, are very rarely recommended by experts. At most, dominant wool blends can be accepted to derive the key benefits of synthetic, ie resistance to wrinkles, especially in clothing used for traveling; however, any synthetic, mixed or otherwise, will always be warmer and more viscous than wool alone. For hot weather, linen is also used, and in the (South) North American cotton seersucker is worn.

The four main colors for clothing worn in business are black, light gray, dark gray, and navy blue, either with or without patterns. In particular, the gray flannel suit has been widely used since the 1930s. In non-business settings or less formal business contexts, chocolate is another important color; olives also occur. In summer, lighter colors like brown or beige are very popular.

For non-business use, tweed has been popular since Victorian times, and is still commonly used. A variety of colors are available, including shades of green, brown, red, and muted gray. Tweed is usually checked, or plain with herringbone weaving, and most associated with the state. While the full tweed suit is not worn by many people now, jackets are often worn as sports jackets with strange pants (pants from different fabrics).

The most conventional settings are buttons 2- or 3 and medium gray or dark gray. Other conservative colors are gray, black, and olive. White and blue colors are acceptable at some events, especially in warm seasons. Bright red and green are usually considered "unconventional" and "tacky". The tradition of calling for men's clothing to be plain clear colors, with a splash of bright colors destined for shirts, ties or handkerchiefs.

In the United States and Britain, around the beginning of the 20th century, casual wear has never been worn traditionally in plain black, this color is not provided for formal wear (including a dinner jacket or stroller), and for administrators. However, the decline of formal wear since the 1950s and the emergence of casual wear in the 1960s allowed the black suit to return to fashion, as many designers began to want to move from business suits to more fashionable outfits.

Traditional business settings are generally in solid colors or with pin lines; windowpane checks are also accepted. Outside of business, the range of acceptable patterns is widening, with plaques such as traditional glen plaid and herringbone, although apart from some very traditional environments such as London banking, it is used for businesses right now. Colors of patterned elements (lines, plaids, and checks) vary by gender and location. For example, bold checks, especially with tweed, are no longer used in the US, while they continue to be worn traditionally in the UK. Some unusual old patterns like diamonds are now scarce everywhere.

Inside the suit jacket, between the outer fabric and the inner layer, there is a sturdy lining cloth to prevent the wool stretch out of shape; This layer of fabric is called the canvas after the fabric from which it was traditionally made. The expensive jacket has a floating canvas , while the cheap produced model has a unified canvas (riveted). A fused canvas is less soft and, if not done well, damages the flexibility and durability of the jacket, so many tailor-fast mockers converge the canvas to less durable, mainly because they may tend to shrink permanently along the edge of the jacket after some use or some dry cleanings. However, some who sell this type of jacket claim that the difference in quality is very small. Some tailors in London state that all clothing ordered in advance must use a floating canvas.

Jacket

Front button

Most single-breasted suits have two or three buttons, and one or four unusual buttons (except that the dinner jacket ("black tie") often has only one button). It is rare to find a suit with more than four buttons, although the zoot setting can have six or more because of its longer length. There are also variations in the placement and style of the buttons, since the placement of the keys is essential to the overall high impression conveyed by the jacket. The middle or top keys will usually line up quite closely with the natural waistline. There seems to be no clear rule about which side of overlap should lie. It usually crosses naturally with the left side forward but not always. Generally, a hidden button holds the overlap in place.

The double-breasted jacket has only half the functioning outer button, because the second line is just for display, forcing them to pair. Some rare jackets can have at least two buttons, and during various periods, such as the 1960s and 1970s, a total of eight are seen. Six distinctive buttons, with two buttons; the last couple floats on top of the overlap. Three buttons below each side may be in this case in a straight line ('keystone arrangement') or more commonly, the upper pair is half as far apart as each pair is below the square. The four-buttoned four-button jacket is usually buttoned on a square. The button layout and collar shape are coordinated to direct the eyes of an observer. For example, if the button is too low, or the collar roll is too noticeable, the eye is pulled from the face, and the waist appears larger.

Lapel

Jacket collars can be grooved (also called "stepping"), peaking ("sharp"), scarves, or "hoaxes" (unusual Chinese and other styles). Each collar style carries different connotations, and is worn with different suit pieces. Curvy collars are the most common of the three usually found only on single-breasted jackets and are the most informal style. They are distinguished by 75 to 90 degree 'notch' at the point where the collar meets the collar. The peaked collar has a sharp edge that points up towards the shoulder. The double-breasted jacket usually has a collar that culminates, although the peaked collar is often found on a single breasted jacket as well. The collar scarf is a style that comes from Victorian evening dress, and thus is usually not seen on a suit jacket except a tuxedo or dinner suit. For a black tie event, only a jacket with pointy collars and a shawl should be worn.


In the 1980s, double-breasted outfits with collar collars were popular with the New Wave's strength and style suit.

In the late 1920s and 1930s, the design that was considered very stylish was a single-breasted peaked collar jacket. It has been in and out of fashion on a regular basis, becoming popular once again during the 1970s, and is still a recognized alternative. The ability to cut the collar down properly in a single-breasted suit is one of the most challenging sewing tasks, even for highly experienced tailors.

The width of the collar is a varied aspect of clothing, and has changed over the years. The 1930s and 1970s featured very wide collars, while in the late 1950s and most of the 1960s matched the very narrow collars - often only an inch wide - in fashion. The 1980s saw a flap with a low canyon (the point on the jacket that formed the "notch" or "top" between the collar and the front collar). The current trend (mid-2000s) leads to the narrow lapels and the higher chasms. The width of the tie usually follows the width of the collar of the jacket.

Collars also have buttonhole, which is meant to hold boutonniÃÆ'¨re, ornamental flowers. This is now only commonly seen in more formal events. Usually a double-breasted outfit has one hole in each collar (with flowers on the left), while a single-breasted suit has only one on the left.

Pockets

Most jackets have a variety of deep pockets, and two main outer pockets, commonly in the form of outboard pockets, folded pockets, or anchors ("besom"). The outboard pouch is, with one additional piece of cloth sewn straight into the front of the jacket, exercise options, sometimes seen in summer linen, or other informal styles. Flap pockets are standard for side pockets, and have an extra auxiliary flap covering the top of the pocket. The jetted pocket is the most formal, with a small piece of cloth that attaches the top and bottom of the gap to the pocket. This style is most often seen in formal attire, such as a dinner jacket.

A breast pocket is usually found on the left side, where a box or handkerchief pocket can be displayed.

In addition to two outer pockets and a standard chest pocket, some suits have a fourth, a ticket pouch, usually located just above the right pocket and approximately half wide. While this was originally only a state setting feature, used to store train tickets, is now visible in some city settings. Another country feature that is also sometimes used in the city is a pair of hacking pockets, which are similar to ordinary, but oblique; this was originally designed to make the bag easier to open while riding a horse while hacking.

Sleeves

Coat jackets in all styles usually have three or four buttons on each cuff, which are often purely decorative (the sleeves are usually sewn closed and can not be unbuttoned to open). Five unusual buttons and is a modern fashion innovation. The number of keys is primarily a function of the formality of the lawsuit; a very casual summer sport coat probably traditional (1930s) has only one button, while the tweed suit usually has three and four city outfits. In the 1970s, two buttons were visible on some city outfits. Today, four common buttons in most business suits and even casual wear.

Although the arm buttons can not usually be undone, the stitches are such that they can look. Functional cuff buttons can be found on high-end or bespoke clothing; this feature is called the surgical cuff and the "work button hole" (AS). Some users let these buttons not open to reveal that they can buy a bespoke suit, even though it's appropriate to let these buttons work. The bespoke modern style and the off-the-rack outfit equipped with the surgeon's cuff have the last two buttons sewn in the center, so that the arms hang neatly when the buttons are removed. Certainty of the length of the fitting arm must be achieved, because once the buttonhole works cut off, the length of the arm is essentially irreversible.

The cuffed sleeve has an extra length of fabric folded back on top of the arm, or just a few piping or stitching over the button to offend the cuff edge. It was popular in the Edwardian era, as a feature of formal wear like a skirt overcoat carried over to informal clothing, but now rare.

Vents

Ventilation is the gap in the lower back ("tail") of the jacket. Initially, ventilation is a sporting option, designed to make driving easier, as well as traditional hatching jackets, formal coats like a mantle morning, and, for practicality, coats. There are currently three ventilation styles: single-vented style (with one hole in the middle); style without ventilation; and a double-vented style (one hole on each side). Ventilation is convenient, especially when using a pocket or sitting, to increase the hanging jacket, so now used on most jackets. Unmanned jackets are associated with Italian seams, whereas a double-ventilated style is usually British. The dinner jacket has traditionally not been ventilated.

Vest

The vest (called vest in American English) is almost always worn with clothes before the 1940s. Because of the allotment during World War II, their prevalence declined, but their popularity has gone in and out of fashion from the 1970s onwards. A pocket watch on a chain, one end inserted through a central hole, often worn with a vest; if not, since World War I when they became famous for military needs, men wore watches, which may be worn with any outfit except full evening dress (white tie). Although many examples of vests worn with double-breasted jackets can be found from the 1920s through the 1940s, that would be unusual today (a double-breasted jacket point, presumably, to remove vests). Traditionally, the bottom button of the vest is not left; like the vents behind the jacket, this helps the body bend over while sitting. Some vests can have collars, others do not.

Trousers

The pants suit is always made of the same material as the jacket. Even from the 1910s to the 1920s, before the invention of a special sports jacket to be worn with strange pants, wearing a suit with strange pants was seen as an alternative to the complete suit. However, with the advent of a modern sports jacket, a suit jacket is always worn with matching trousers, and long pants are always worn with a suit jacket.

The width of the pants has varied considerably over the past few decades. In the 1920s, straight and wide-legged pants, with a standard width on a 23-inch cuff. After 1935, trousers began to taper at the bottom of the foot. Trousers remained wide on the top of the foot throughout the 1940s. In the 1950s and 1960s, a slimmer look has become popular. In the 1970s, suit makers offered a variety of styles of trousers, including blazing, lined bells, wide legs, and more traditional tapered pants. In the 1980s these styles vanished for the slim slender trousers.

One variation in the design of trousers is the use or not of the folds. The most classic pants style is to have two folds, usually forwards, as this gives the comfort of sitting and better hanging up standing. This is still a common style, and for this utility reason has been used throughout the 20th century. The original style came from an exaggerated Oxford bag used in the 1930s at Oxford, which, though short-lived, started the trend for a fuller front. This style is still seen as the smartest, featuring trousers with black and white ties. However, at various periods throughout the last century, fronted flat pants without folds have been worn, and swings in fashion have adequately characterized that the fashion-ready brands-more fashion-oriented clothing have not produced these two types continuously.

Turn-ups at the bottom of pants, or cufflinks, were originally popularized in 1890 by Edward VII, and were popular with clothing throughout the 1920s and 1930s. They are always an informal choice, inappropriate on all formal attire.

Other variations in the style of pants include the rise of trousers. This was very high in the early half of the 20th century, especially with formal wear, rising above the natural waist, to allow vests that cover the waist to descend just below the narrowest point. Despite serving a lesser purpose, these high altitudes were duplicated in everyday wear during that period. Since then, the fashion has changed, and it is rarely that high again with more back styles to the lower pants, even dropping down to have a belt resting on the hips. Other aspects that change from the pieces include the length, the decisive breaks, bunches of fabric just above the shoe when the front seam is slightly longer than the height to the top of the shoe. Some parts of the world, like Europe, traditionally choose shorts with little or no pause, while Americans often choose to wear a little rest.

The last major difference is whether the trousers use a belt or braces (suspenders). While the belt was initially never worn with a suit, the use of belt imposed during wartime (caused by elastic usage restrictions caused by wartime shortage) contributed to their increasing popularity, with braces now less popular than belts. When regular braces are used, the buttons to place them are placed on the outside of the waist, as they will be covered by a vest or cardigan, but now more often for buttons inside the pants. Pants that wear braces are somewhat different in cutting at the waist, using an inch of extra thickness and also high on the back. The split at the waist at the back is in the form of fishtail . Those who prefer braces emphasize that, because they hang from their shoulders, they always make long pants fit and hung exactly as they should, while a belt allows the waist pants to sag in the hips or below the prominent center, and require constant re-positioning; also, they allow, does work best with a slightly looser waist that provides space for natural expansion when seated.

Trousers suit, also known as underwear pants in the US, is a trouser style intended as a formal or semi-formal dress. They are often made of wool or polyester (although many other synthetic and natural textiles are used) and may be designed to be worn with matching suits. Trousers often have folds in front of each pair of pants, and may have one or more folds. Trousers suit can be worn in many formal and semi-formal events combined with a shirt that has no ties and a more casual dress, which can be considered as smart casual attire.

Breeches

As an alternative to trousers, pants (or underwear in English variations where this does not refer to underwear) can be worn with informal attire, such as wool. It's shorter, down to just below the knee, tightly tied at the top of the calf with a cuff tab or button. While once common, they are now usually only used when engaged in traditional outdoor sports, such as shooting or golf. The length and design are closely related to the plus-fours (and plus-sixes etc.) that are worn for sports, but differ in having no bagginess. They are usually designed to be worn with long socks that meet just below the knee, but horse pants, worn with long boots like top boots, long enough to fill the boot and do not show socks.

Accessories

Accessories for clothing include ties, shoes, watches and pocket watches, pocket boxes, cufflinks, tie clips, tack ties, tie bars, bow ties, lapel pins, and hats.

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Situation to wear and perception settings

In the Mediterranean

Throughout the 20th and 21st centuries, Italy has become a leader in menswear design. The slim fit suit developed in the 1960s was widely imitated by the mod subculture, and experienced a large-scale revival during the late 2000s through the mid-2010s due to their relationship with James Bond and Don Draper of Mad Men. Due to damp climates, Italian clothing is often made in shades of light gray, sand or stone to reflect sunlight. Typical fabrics include light flannels, wool and mohair mixtures, and linen or chino fabrics for hot weather.

Elsewhere in the Mediterranean, clothing is considered impractical without constant air conditioning. Consequently, most non conservative businesses, regardless of size or wealth tend to use casual clothing even in formal meetings. Some professions, such as banking, law, and certain government employees who deal directly with the public have a more formal dresscode. Similarly, some Israeli branches of American companies tend to mimic the clothing style of their American counterparts.

In East Asia and South Asia

In the 20th century China, the Communist regime encouraged citizens to wear Mao's clothes because of its egalitarian and utilitarian design. Although now less common than ever, Mao's suit is still widely used in rural areas.

After Indian independence, there was a counterattack against Western fashions because of their relationship with the previous colonialist regime. Instead, professional Indian men began wearing a Nehru five-button suit, made from khadi to support the local textile industry. During the 1960s, this outfit became fashionable among English mod subcultures for its use by The Beatles. It made a brief comeback during the mid-2000s, but since 2010 they have gone out of fashion in the West. Today, Thailand and especially Bangkok are widely regarded as a specialized tailor center in the world where international market leaders such as Narry Tailors, Empire Tailors and Tailor On Ten are headquartered and from which the innovation is recognized from 'The new school' i> in the classic fashion now derived.

In the Philippines

In the tropical Philippines, former colonies of the United States, clothing is often called canoe , the abbreviation of Amerikano ("American" in various Filipino languages). Due to the warm tropical climate, formal wear is only used when necessary, including formal, social or business events. Filipinos rarely wear suits, and the young man might only wear one for a high school or college party, which in this case can be rented. On any occasion where the suit is worn, it will also be acceptable to wear a long-sleeved or short-sleeved barrel tagalog, a Philippine national outfit.

In the United States

Because wearing a suit fulfills a respectable image, many people wear clothing during the job interview process. Interview settings are usually conservative styles, and are often made of blue or gray fabrics. Interview clothes often consist of woolen fabrics or wool blends, with a pattern of solid lines or pins. However, the interview setting style will depend on the organizational culture of the industry where someone is looking for a job.

In modern society, men's clothing has become less common as everyday clothing apparel. During the 1990s, partly fueled by the skyrocketing of successful new technology companies with different cultural attitudes, the prevailing management philosophy at the time was moving in favor of more casual clothing for employees; the aim is to foster a sense of openness and egalitarianism. The "casual business" dress still tends to be the norm for most workers and sometimes includes middle management. Traditional business dresses as a daily style are generally limited to middle and upper management companies (now sometimes collectively referred to as "clothing"), and for professions (especially legal). Casual wear is also becoming common in Western academic institutions, with traditional business attire falling in popularity.

For many men who do not wear suits for work, especially in Western societies, wear suits are provided for special occasions, such as weddings, funerals, court appearances, and other more formal social events. Therefore, since they are not everyday clothes for most men, they are often viewed as "stuffy" and uncomfortable. The combination of ties, belts and vests can be tight and tight compared to contemporary casual wear, especially when purchased at minimal cost and quality for rare occasions, rather than being made for comfortable wear. This tendency became common enough that the Christian Science Monitor reported that the suit combined with ties and trousers was "a design that ensures that the wearer will feel uncomfortable." During the late 1960s and early 1970s, men's clothing became less common, in the same way as skirts and dresses dropped by many women for pants. This is seen as an exemption from the adjustment of the previous period and coincided with the women's liberation movement.

What is also remarkable is that the suit now appears frequently in Stone, Heavy Metal and Gothic events, although such groups were once known for the rather rebellious clothing tradition. Artists and bands like Nick Cave, Marilyn Manson, Blutengel and Akercocke are known for the use of formal wear in music videos and stage performances. The suit also appeared when fans dressed for styles like Lolita, Victorian and Corporate Gothic.

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Dress etiquette for men

buttoned the jacket

The buttoning jacket is mainly determined by the position of the button , the size of how high the button is in relation to the natural waist. In some (now unusual) styles in which the buttons are placed high, tailors will intend to wear different button suits from the more common lower attitudes. However, some general guidelines are given here.

Coat double-breasted suits are almost always kept in buttons. When there is more than one functional keyhole (as in traditional six-two settings), only one button needs to be tightened; the user can choose to bind only the bottom button, to present a longer line (style popularized by Prince George, Duke of Kent).

Single-breasted coat coats can be tightened or removed. In the two-button setting, the bottom button is traditionally left unlocked except with unusual jacket pieces, eg. paddock. Legend has it that King Edward VII started the trend of leaving the button under the suit as well as the vest removed.

When tightening the three button settings, the middle button is tightened, and the top is sometimes, but the bottom is traditionally not designed to be. Although in the past some three-button jackets were cut so that all three could be tied up without curtain distortion, this did not happen. Four button settings are not traditional and unusual. The one button setting has regained some popularity (this is also one of the classic styles of sewing Savile Row). The button should always be tied up while standing.

With a single-breasted suit, it is appropriate to have the buttons loosened while sitting to avoid the ugly curtains. A good double-breasted suit can usually be left buttoned, to avoid the constant trouble of repeating the inner button ("anchor button") when standing.

Tie with settings

Working with a tie depends very much on personal taste, but in conservative terms there are some basic guidelines.

Color: The tie should always be darker than the wearer's shirt. The background color of the tie should not be the same as the shirt, while the front of the tie must contain the color of the shirt and thus "take" on the shirt color. Ideally, the tie should also integrate the color of the clothes in the same way. Generally, simple or gentle patterns are preferred for conservative clothing, although this is a term with multiple interpretations. During the late 1990s and early 2000s, it became popular to match the tie color with a t-shirt (a "monochromatic" look popularized by Regis Philbin's TV personality) or even wearing lighter colored ties with darker shirts, usually during events official. A light blue shirt with a darker blue tie in its color is also common.

Knots: Some of the most common knots are Four-in-hand, Half-Windsor, Windsor (often called Full-Windsor or Double-Windsor to distinguish them from half-Windsor) and Shelby or Pratt. A Four-in-hand, Half-Windsor, or Windsor are generally most suited to the suit, especially by contemporary guidelines. Once tied up and set properly, the bottom of the tie can extend anywhere from the user's belly button, up to slightly below the waist. The narrow end should not extend below the wide end, although this can sometimes look acceptable with a thin bond.

Alternative: In the 1960s, it was fashionable for men and women to wear scarves with suits in knots that were fastened either inside a shirt as an ascot or under a collar like a worn-like tie. This style began to fade in the mid-1970s and back in the 1990s especially for women. However it made a small comeback in 2005 and some famous stars used it. Although some wore scarves in the 1960s, ties were still preferred among business workers.

Butterfly relationship: Butterfly relationship always provides an alternative to tie, and even precedes the tie. The bow tie is even considered, arguably, as more formal or stylish than a tie, especially when worn with clothing. During the period of "powerdressing," or "dress for success" in the 1980s, butterfly ties, though in a minority, certainly had a market share of business and professional fashion. These include women professionals, who wear a slightly more complete butterfly bow tie with the popular skirt and blouse suit in the business world. A bow tie, for professional men or women, is usually the same fabric, color, and pattern as a tie.

Shirts with suits

Socks with settings

In the United States it is common for socks to match the pants legs. This makes the legs look longer and minimize the attention drawn by the pants legs that are adjusted to be too short. The more common rule is the socks are darker than the color of the pants, but potentially different colors. With patterned socks, ideally the background color of the socks should match the main color of the suit. If it is not possible to match the trouser legs, socks may match one's shoes. In particular, pale or even white socks can be worn with, for example, a cream linen suit with white shoes.

Socks should be at least as high as mid-calf, if not knee-deep ( over-the-calf ), and usually made primarily of cotton or wool, though sumptuous socks or dresses may use more exotic blends such as silk and cashmere. Prior to World War II, patterned socks were common, and various designs such as Argyle or contrasting socks were often seen. After World War II, socks became finer in color. In lieu of its long length (which will remain by itself), some men still use the garter to lift their socks, but this is unusual.


Dress etiquette for women

The ethics that dress for women generally follows the same guidelines used by men, with some differences and more flexibility.

For women, a suit or a suit suit is acceptable; blouses, which can be white or colored, usually replace the shirt. Women's clothing can also be worn with a colored top or a T-shirt. Also, women usually wear suits in professional suits, rather than as general formal wear, as do men.

Women's clothing comes in a wider range of colors such as darks, pastels, and gems.

Women generally do not wear a tie with their clothes. Luxurious silk scarves that resemble floppy tie ties became popular in North America in the 1970s. In the 1980s, women entered the white-collar work force in increasing numbers and their adopted fashion apparel did not differ from men's business attire. In the early to mid-1980s, a conservatively designed skirt suit was the norm, in the same color and fabric that was considered standard in men's clothing. This is usually worn with a buttoned blouse that is buttoned, usually white or some pastel colors. These are often accessed with a bow tie version, usually the same fabric, color, and pattern with a bow tie and bow tie, but tied in a fuller bow in the collar.


See also

  • Western dress code



Note




References




External links

  • Emily Post's Etiquette : The dress of a Gentleman, 1922
  • "Introduction to 18th century fashion". Fashion, Jewelry & amp; Accessories . Museum of Victoria and Albert . Retrieved 2008/08/06
  • Meek, Miki; Lam Thuy Vo (September 6, 2012). "The Difference Between $ 99 And $ 5,000 Lawsuit, In One Graph". Planet Money . Retrieved October 10 2013 < span> Ã,

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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