Fri Jul 08, 2011 10:43 pm
It's an interesting point here, in saying that there is a certain level of formality that people won't surpass. Before anyone gets the wrong idea, I'm neither trying to make a historical re-enactment point, nor raise class issues. Things like the top hat, coats cut with seams, white tie, black tie, and even the neck-tie itself, evolved because people thought they looked good. Our age seems to think that looking comfortable is more important than that. Surely, if something objectively looks good, we should feel more free to wear it. Evening-wear evolved because it looks flattering at night or in dim lighting. I'd much rather we continued to wear evening-dress regularly, and allowed a white tie with a short coat, than continue in the present situation, where we feel that we have to wait to be told to dress up to feel entitled to do so. What's happened to our collective sense of occasion? A dinner suit is just a suit after all. Why shouldn't we wear it when we like, rather than waiting for permission? It's very easy to say that 100 years ago, people took more care about their appearence; however, as a sizable body of people alive today, what's stopping us raising the fashion stakes and not feeling inhibited. Living in London, where dinner suits get an almost weekly outing, it's easy to forget how rare that actually is. If wearing a white tie with a black coat makes someone feel enabled to dress for an occasion, why not, I say. I'd rather the mentality of preparing for an evening, and caring about one's dress, survived, than a rigid code were adhered to, and it died out entirely.