Elaina
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,592
To be honest, I've never taken apart a tie or seen one in that bad of condition before 1930, so I'm glad to know that.
Was part of the attraction of the sevenfold tie that it could be recut and wear longer when it frayed?cookie said:There is someone advertising a pattern for [sevenfold ties] on eBay.
I have hand sewn ties that are over twenty years old.The real Henry said:Yeah, looks doable, but I wonder how durable a tie is, that's sewn by hand that way.
The finest ties made are traditionally hand sewn.The real Henry said:I think I prefer the traditional way and keep on doing it with the machine.
Fletch said:Was part of the attraction of the sevenfold tie that it could be recut and wear longer when it frayed?
So extra body, better hand and knotting characteristics didn't enter into it either?Marc Chevalier said:I once read in an issue of Apparel Arts that the sevenfold tie had snob appeal. In other words, since much more silk 'yardage' was used in the tie, it made the tie more expensive. Higher price tag = exclusivity.
Men with the disposable income to get sevenfold ties had no need or desire to recut them. They would simply buy new ones.
Fletch said:So extra body, better hand and knotting characteristics didn't enter into it either?
Marc Chevalier said:Thanks! And if Andy's site can have its own official necktie and pocket square ... why can't we?
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The real Henry said:Yeah, looks doable, but I wonder how durable a tie is, that's sewn by hand that way. I think I prefer the traditional way and keep on doing it with the machine.
Regards,
Henrik
I concur.Marc Chevalier said:Apparel Arts didn't think so. They felt it was largely a gimmick
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Marc Chevalier said:Apparel Arts didn't think so. They felt it was largely a gimmick, though a harmless one. [/COLOR]
Baron Kurtz said:Unlike "silk tipping" for budget ties which they though was an incredibly harmful rip-off.
Marc Chevalier said:lol That's right! They devoted lots of ink to that one! Funny thing is, I almost never run into "tipped" '30s ties.
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Marc Chevalier said:The "Tipped Tie Menace": a tempest in a teapot.
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