Tiller
Practically Family
- Messages
- 637
- Location
- Upstate, New York
Just my opinion, of course.
Couldn't agree more Jim. The harder it is to get a job, the more people are going to attempt to stand out, and be taken seriously.
Just my opinion, of course.
The suit has survived well over a hundred years, and I don't see it disappearing anytime soon. I don't see it becoming the normal wear for the "average joe" again either, but I hardly see it being replaced completely, and especially not by a sports coat.
Around here I get the "Why are you in a suit?" question when I'm wearing a sport coat and dress trousers. If they see anything coat-and-tie-like they think its a suit even if the trousers and coat don't match. :eusa_doh:
Cheers,
Tom
My mum and dad are very informal people. To the point that if I wore a tie, mum would complain I'm WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY overdressing. I'm serious. I wore one for Chinese New Year and she nearly had a heart-attack.
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If I ever meet up with you Tom we'll go have a night on the town dressed to the nines. Women are drawn to men wearing a well fitted suit sense the first question on their lips is usually "Why are you in a suit?" . lol
I would love to see a return to more dignified dressing. I don't know about FORMAL dressing, but certainly more dignified.
My dad insisted I wear a pair of jeans to my cousin's wedding last year. I nearly had a heart-attack. I immediately balanced it out with a waistcoat and double albert watch-chain. One has to retain a certain level of class in such an important event as a wedding ceremony.
Around here I get the "Why are you in a suit?" question when I'm wearing a sport coat and dress trousers. If they see anything coat-and-tie-like they think its a suit even if the trousers and coat don't match. :eusa_doh:
Cheers,
Tom
WhyIt is going from 'formal' to ultra-formal.
The dinner jacket has already taken the place of evening kit as formal, while the dark suit counts as semi-formal (if you are lucky), and I foresee that shifting again soon, so that the tux is banished to the realm of the "ultra formal" like tails, and tails will become costume like the frock coat which came before them. It is sad, really, because I think that well fitting evening kit is the most universally flattering clothing for men, shortly followed by the tux.
Not quite. White tie's altogether a different creature-- mandatory white vest vs. black/white vest or cummerbund, white tie, the jacket doesn't close, the front of the jacket is cut differently... I think there are a few more subtleties but they don't come to mind now. It's considered super-ultra-formal, which is why it really isn't seen much anymore.
I don't see tux's becoming ultra formal. Formal yes... ultra no. Even today their are black tie parties, and the simple fact the people wear them to weddings still, and of course most proms have tux's of some kind even if they look horrible. Even in pop culture their is usually a high class action character (such as 007) who is dressed in a tux in at least one scene. Honestly I think some of you are a bit more pessimistic then even I am . I don't see the death of either the tux, or the suit anytime soon.
Also with frock coats wasn't Obama and Biden wearing bullet proof frock coats at their inauguration? I recall reading an article about it a few years back. If my memory isn't playing tricks on me anyways lol. If so that shows that even the frock coat isn't a complete costume, just incredibly rare lol.
I don't see the death of the suit any time soon, but considering the evolution of the suit through its four centuries of history, my argument isn't that the suit will vanish, but, will be largely unrecognizable by the end of the century. Consider the origin of the suit - the gentleman of the 1600s. Now contrast that with what we all think when the word suit is spoken. That's what I think will happen. There will be suits, but the outfit we call a suit today will be as anachronistic as the pomp and frills, knee high stockings and knicker pants of 400 years ago. That idea of a suit survived over 200 years. Our current vision of a suit is going strong at over 200 years. What's next? My guess is that the sense of cohesiveness that has been the definition of a suit will erode first, and the jacket and unpaired slacks will dominate. In what sort of appearance? I don't know. We were supposed to be wearing glowing metallic neon and riding flying cars by the year 2,000, but that didn't pan out. What a shame. The future is anyone's guess.
I don't see tux's becoming ultra formal. Formal yes... ultra no. Even today their are black tie parties...