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I've noticed that in several movies from the 1930s / 40s some men (usually older men playing captain of industry or senior banker or lawyer type of roles) wearing three-piece suits in which the waistcoat is trimmed or "piped" with a thin (1/2" or so) piece of white fabric. The body of the waistcoat will be of the same material and color (blue or grey, for example) as the suit's pants and jacket, but there will be this white trim / piping on the "V" part of the waistcoat.
However, I've never seen a waistcoat like this pop up on Ebay (to be fair, I am not a regular follower of Ebay's vintage offerings, but I do look from time to time) or as a topic of discussion or in pictures posted on this forum.
Has anyone else seen this? Does anyone know anything about them? Were they popular? How did they evolve? They seem kinda formal (but they are part of a suit not tuxedo) - did they signify some status? Where they only appropriate in certain places?
Thank you
However, I've never seen a waistcoat like this pop up on Ebay (to be fair, I am not a regular follower of Ebay's vintage offerings, but I do look from time to time) or as a topic of discussion or in pictures posted on this forum.
Has anyone else seen this? Does anyone know anything about them? Were they popular? How did they evolve? They seem kinda formal (but they are part of a suit not tuxedo) - did they signify some status? Where they only appropriate in certain places?
Thank you