
http://www.cutterandtailor.com/forum
Here we go again and, again,the fish rise, in the same pool, to the perfectly placed bait as you, sator, sit there on the bank, munching some tasty snack, just waiting for the water to BOIL. Please, then, let us see a photograph of some great and good person before 1980 in a DJ with a step lapel. I know that you have something to hand already just, waiting, waiting...... as you sit there smiling.....Sator wrote:The step lapel on a dress lounge/dinner jacket is perfectly classical. The reason is simple: informal dinner clothes are a very casual form of evening dress. Perhaps it is even preferable that such informal dress for the dinner table have a step lapel
As almost always you are right. I was surprised looking though my Spy prints to see that amost all morning coats were drawn with notch lapels.Sator wrote:Notice that Sean Connery is sitting - at the dinner table. For that purpose his dress is absolutely correct. The problem is when informal dinner clothes are taken into more formal settings. For that, it has to be adapted to the new purpose, just as morning coats were adapted for formal dress to take DB lapels when they ceased being informal sports coats for skating, horse riding and the like:
Some Spy cartoons also show some of these coats with facings.culverwood wrote:As almost always you are right. I was surprised looking though my Spy prints to see that amost all morning coats were drawn with notch lapels.Sator wrote:Notice that Sean Connery is sitting - at the dinner table. For that purpose his dress is absolutely correct. The problem is when informal dinner clothes are taken into more formal settings. For that, it has to be adapted to the new purpose, just as morning coats were adapted for formal dress to take DB lapels when they ceased being informal sports coats for skating, horse riding and the like:
True. No such distinction is meant to exist. Nor does such a distinction have any right to exist. However, what is one to do when one is invited to wear informal dinner clothes (aka black tie) to what would traditionally be a formal eventstoreynicholas wrote:I am not convinced by your suggestion that there are informal and formal DJs.
NJS
I understand your point. I agree that one could quite properly wear full evening dress to a black tie 'do'; however, it would make a bit of a scene, one suspects and, therefore, I guess that most people probably wouldn't (out of all those in the 0.1% or so of the population with the moth-balled option) .Sator wrote:True. No such distinction is meant to exist. Nor does such a distinction have any right to exist. However, what is one to do when one is invited to wear informal dinner clothes (aka black tie) to what would traditionally be a formal eventstoreynicholas wrote:I am not convinced by your suggestion that there are informal and formal DJs.
NJS?
That ends up creating a distinction. An unfortunate one but a distinction nonetheless: informal dinner dress in it's correct place and its incorrect place as ersatz pseudo-formal dress (gasp). Of course, there is the option of doggedly insisting on wearing white tie to traditionally formal events even if the invitation states "black tie".
Agreed. I remain firmly of the opinion (controversial though it may be) that when "black tie" is inappropriately requested for a type of event that traditionally demands formal dress, it is perfectly correct to wear full dress.storeynicholas wrote: I agree that one could quite properly wear full evening dress to a black tie 'do'
NJS
Great photograph - George Sanders and Ronald Colman wouldn't let the side down!Sator wrote:Agreed. I remain firmly of the opinion (controversial though it may be) that when "black tie" is inappropriately requested for a type of event that traditionally demands formal dress, it is perfectly correct to ear full dress.storeynicholas wrote: I agree that one could quite properly wear full evening dress to a black tie 'do'
NJS
This, in fact, is exactly what seems to be going on here:
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 10 guests