http://asuitablewardrobe.dynend.com/2013/01/forget-about-necktie-folds.html
was just reading this on SW .. got to say i prefer an english necktie due to the more robust linings used inside .. the knot seems to shape better, its also easier to take off as an unlined (or lightly lined tie) pulls when you try and undo it, also an unlined tie just feels flimsy to me ..
fruity
Seven folds being just a marketing ploy like thread counts and super wools.
I'm with fruity in that I prefer the English type.
This line from the article raised a smile -"It is the necktie of Naples, where the heat lends itself to clothing that is lighter in weight." I can't ever remember being hot and thinking 'if only my tie were lighter, that would make all the difference'.
I like the English type too. I agree with a lot said in that article. However, I am always curious why people attracted to this space seem to need to strictly define everything. Clothing attracts a lot of control freaks and a lot of what makes dressing elegant, stylish and admirable is at odds with "control" and "anxiety". Dressing is about appropriate but it's also about flow and ease.
Men who wear suits without ties think they look cool and individual but instead they merely look uniform, rumpled and expressionless. The antithesis of dandiacal warmth.
Confusion abounds. I get the impression that middle aged men think suits age them and other men. The younger characters both male and female consider suits and ties to be youthful. Clothing seems to carry both generational impressions as well as innate ones.
I pick ties on colour and pattern. Not construction.
I like character ties. Yogi Bear, Huckleberry Hound, Scrooge McDuck.
I'm getting some made at Van Buck, fabric will hopefully be off to them next week, I think they'll be disgusted when they see the sample tie turn up to copy, an American mid-c Rooster, flimsy by UK standards. But just how I like a tie!
Last edited by THOR !!!! (2013-01-19 16:01:10)