skyvue
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,221
- Location
- New York City
jamespowers said:Rules 1 and 3 simply cannot be followed when you wear vintage ties.
They can if you're wearing vintage ties AND vintage trousers.
jamespowers said:Rules 1 and 3 simply cannot be followed when you wear vintage ties.
jamespowers said:Rules 1 and 3 simply cannot be followed when you wear vintage ties. If you tied a 30s tie with both ends meeting, they would certainly end far above the waistband---no matter what knot you tied.
skyvue said:They can if you're wearing vintage ties AND vintage trousers.
Edward said:As pointed out above, waistband were much higher back in the thirties, but it also seems to me that tie length was automatically less of an issue back then as the shorter ties of the day would more commonly have been worn with either close DB jacket, or a waistcoat (or even, sometimes, both), so the area of shirtfront between tie and waistband wouldn't typically have been on show, anyhow.
Didn't use to be. But ties today are more of a uniform piece than everyday wear. If they deviate too much from a serious, businessy look, they look comical.Tony in Tarzana said:Well, lining up both blades while having the tie come to the belt eliminates me from wearing vintage ties.
Then again, in the old movies, I see lots of fellows whose ties don't come all the way down to the belt.
Is that such a fashion faux pas?
Fletch said:Didn't use to be. But ties today are more of a uniform piece than everyday wear. If they deviate too much from a serious, businessy look, they look comical.
jamespowers said:It still doesn't work. I have tried it and your average height man in the US will not be able to get a barely 48 inch tie around a 17 inch neck and down say 19 inches on both sides to a waistband high or otherwise. The rule does not apply because it is scientifically impossible to get 48 to equal 55 and that is without taking the length needed for making the knot.
jamespowers said:Rules 1 and 3 simply cannot be followed when you wear vintage ties. If you tied a 30s tie with both ends meeting, they would certainly end far above the waistband---no matter what knot you tied.
Edward said:Does anyone known where I should go to have some ties shortened?
skyvue said:I've done it successfully, and I think I'm pretty average-sized (5' 11" if I stand up straight, and a 16" neck). I have lots of high-waisted trousers, some of which come to just below my rib cage. Reaching them with a vintage tie is no problem whatsoever.
Widebrim said:That's why I mentioned to Tony that it wasn't uncommon to have a tie end way above the beltline before the Bold Look came around (and it can even be seen in some photos/movies up to the early '50s). If a tie is, say, 48" long and you're wearing low-rise trousers, it's just about impossible to have both tie blades meet at the belt, unless you are somewhat shorter in stature. (It is impossible for me, probably due to my being 6' tall. Right now, I'm wearing a 51" long Towncraft Deluxe necktie, and some lower-rising trousers, and I can almost get both ends to meet at the belt.[huh] )
Geesie said:Gentlemen, there's a neat solution to all of this.
Wear more bow ties.
Geesie said:Gentlemen, there's a neat solution to all of this.
Wear more bow ties.
Your logic assumes as fact that all men have long torsos and large necks, and all vintage ties are 48 inches or less.jamespowers said:It still doesn't work. I have tried it and your average height man in the US will not be able to get a barely 48 inch tie around a 17 inch neck and down say 19 inches on both sides to a waistband high or otherwise. The rule does not apply because it is scientifically impossible to get 48 to equal 55 and that is without taking the length needed for making the knot.
Indeed! Does not the relatively short length of ties from before c.1950 imply that a waistcoat or sleeveless V-neck pullover (I think Americans call this a "sweater-vest") will be worn?Nick D said:Or wear a waistcoat
Hal said:Indeed! Does not the relatively short length of ties from before c.1950 imply that a waistcoat or sleeveless V-neck pullover (I think Americans call this a "sweater-vest") will be worn?
Tony in Tarzana said:Well, lining up both blades while having the tie come to the belt eliminates me from wearing vintage ties.
Then again, in the old movies, I see lots of fellows whose ties don't come all the way down to the belt.
Is that such a fashion faux pas?