Gentlemen,
I'm faced with making decisions about the vest for my dinner suit. Since the vest is a "hold-over" from white tie, should I stick with white piqué as I would for a tailcoat? Or should it be made from the same fabric as my dinner jacket and trousers? If so, should it be the shawl collar, SB, 3 button version? Would the lapels be grosgrain here or not? (My suit will be a peaked lapel faced in grosgrain, SB, one-button.)
I'm looking to make this set of clothes last for a good 20 yrs., so I'd prefer to do the traditional thing. Although my lapels will be 4" since I'm trying to look a little lean and long.
Thank you in advance for any replies.
CCox
Looking Before I Leap: Questions for "My" Tailor
You can always get piqué (or some sort of fancy silk) later on.
For now, get one made from the jacket/trs fabric, with the same grosgrain lapels. Low cut, 3-button. With peak lapel jackets, I like vest lapels that are sort of squared off on the bottom, as with white tie.
For now, get one made from the jacket/trs fabric, with the same grosgrain lapels. Low cut, 3-button. With peak lapel jackets, I like vest lapels that are sort of squared off on the bottom, as with white tie.
Thank you Concordia. It will look wonderful.Concordia wrote:You can always get piqué (or some sort of fancy silk) later on.
For now, get one made from the jacket/trs fabric, with the same grosgrain lapels. Low cut, 3-button. With peak lapel jackets, I like vest lapels that are sort of squared off on the bottom, as with white tie.
A last question: if I put on two pockets, would you recommend welt to match the breast pocket of the jacket or jetted to match the hip pockets of the jacket? I would think welt.
I think welt is standard, but I never thought much about it. I don't remember seeing jetted before.
I have welt pockets on a white formal vest from the late 20s that look fine. Think I'll go with that. Thanks again.
-
- Information
-
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 83 guests