Balanced Lapels
Posted: Mon Apr 08, 2019 1:44 pm
I spoke about Balanced Lapels yesterday in a discussion of Old Henry’s handsome DB creation. The two Lapel examples below are very different in size and shape, but they have one thing in common. They are Balanced.
2NXihAbvQwyZOtDFZfeQiA_thumb_26fc by The London Lounge, on Flickr
V7Yq8L1ZTZWfPK4OemZUUw_thumb_26fb by The London Lounge, on Flickr
The FU lapels in the first example are imposing both from their breadth and their length. But the large dimensions of the lapels does not stand out because of their balance, the harmony that starts at the rich roll from the button point on up.
The lapels in the second example are smaller, both in their breadth and length. The roll from the button point is, as a consequence, more narrow. It is in Balance with the rest of the lapel that is narrow.
Elements in Balance, as in these two lapels, produce an aesthetically pleasing image. What we want to avoid are imbalances that make an element stand out from the whole. And in DB jackets you often see the thin roll at the button point from example number two paired with the great width of the lapel at the notch from example one. This is something often seen in Neapolitan DB coats. It makes the lapel appear like great Elephant’s ears that overpower the image. What we see are huge, imbalanced lapels. We don’t see the coat.
Cheers
2NXihAbvQwyZOtDFZfeQiA_thumb_26fc by The London Lounge, on Flickr
V7Yq8L1ZTZWfPK4OemZUUw_thumb_26fb by The London Lounge, on Flickr
The FU lapels in the first example are imposing both from their breadth and their length. But the large dimensions of the lapels does not stand out because of their balance, the harmony that starts at the rich roll from the button point on up.
The lapels in the second example are smaller, both in their breadth and length. The roll from the button point is, as a consequence, more narrow. It is in Balance with the rest of the lapel that is narrow.
Elements in Balance, as in these two lapels, produce an aesthetically pleasing image. What we want to avoid are imbalances that make an element stand out from the whole. And in DB jackets you often see the thin roll at the button point from example number two paired with the great width of the lapel at the notch from example one. This is something often seen in Neapolitan DB coats. It makes the lapel appear like great Elephant’s ears that overpower the image. What we see are huge, imbalanced lapels. We don’t see the coat.
Cheers