I'm not talking formal or semi-formal, but everyday....Anybody ?
You rarely see them over here unless it's somebody trying to make a rather self-conscious point these days.
Famously Gynaecologists wear them along with a few senior medical consultants & even fewer legal chaps (very, very few).
In England the bow tie is mainly associated with old style comedians or showbiz types now. It's an un-serious tie and not an 'establishment' look at all. Pretty much it is 'costume' these days.
A difference between English Trad & American Trad?
How mainstream is the bow as an American Trad tie beyond AAAT would you say?
(Let's take for granted that Trad exists and also exists beyond the clothing MBs for this one.)
All the AmTrad shops sell them - How much are they worn & by whom?
Interested.
Edit: And as far as "The Ivy League Look" goes in Europe they just don't feature at all.
Last edited by jack_sparrow (2007-09-06 09:49:19)
Bow ties aren't exactly mainstream nor yet are they entirely relegated to costume. One is more likely to see them in cities. When I lived in DC, I probably saw about one per day if I was in office-land.
Personally, I have quite a number of them. Haven't been wearing them so much lately. Sooner or later, I'll go through another prolonged spell of wearing them.
Last edited by AQG (2007-09-06 09:49:11)
I see them fairly often here in Chi-town. Usually older and younger professional fellows, doctors and lawyers. Seems like the middle ages guys don't like them. I like the Brooks #1 in navy best.
Interesting. A young guy turning up in a bow tie over here would have just removed any chances he might have had of being promoted or taken seriously in any industry. Middle aged men would wear them more (if anyone) and a few older guys.
Wearing a bb#1 in gold today, blue button down, navy blue pinstripe sack of the "Pressidential" line.
I'll add to Mr. A. Q. Gentleman that I see them frequently in Washington, DC. Then again, this is a town of transplants from elsewhere.
Mostly on the folllowing: older gents, fraternity boys, Capitol Hill staffers, academics.
TB
I think some guys like them because women notice them in a good way. Like pink shirts. Guys make fun of other guys in pink shirts, or bow ties, but women like them. Well I like them too.
Absolutely, T3B, old brother, old pal - Just the bow in general.
Also - you're right, I am basing my observations on the photos on AAAT.
Funny, whenever I generalise about AAAT (which I have been known to do) it's always Patrick & Brownshoe's names that come up to prove I'm doing the forum a disservice. Can we agree that apart from Patrick & Brownshoe (who stand out over there when compared to the Squire & the Preacher anyway) when I talk about AAAT Trad as we know it I do actually make sense?
Go on - I dare you to agree with me!
j.
Last edited by jack_sparrow (2007-09-06 10:37:39)
I'd say Patrick & Brownshoe were most untypical "Trads", is what I'm saying.
Looks like I have lots of reading to do. Jack, I take it you never wear a bow tie then?
I do like them, but wear them pretty infrequently these days. I have to be in a certain mood.
I like to wear them sort of the way the Ralph Lauren models do on the Polo website--often with something like jeans and a sweater vest, or with a tartan shirt and slim cords--in a very preppy/Bohemian/student-y way, I guess. That takes the "old man" out of it, in my opinion.
I just picked up a nifty second-hand Brooks Brothers double-breasted navy blazer--I'm thinking I might wear it tomorrow with jeans, oxford shirt, dirty bucs (or suede chukkas?), and a bow tie. I work in a museum full of weirdos, so I don't fear for my professional prospects.
Septa seems a fine fellow too...
And EastVillageTrad (the poster formerly known as Squadron A) has equally been recommended to me by one who knows.
Then there's Doctor Damage...
Rojo dresses good but talks a shade to the right maybe. Each to their own. Concentrate on the clothes.
Everybody - Please feel free to add to the list.
Let us praise famous men.
... Harris dresses well too... Plus he is a master storyteller...
j.
Would Harris be old money?