Anthony Jordan
Practically Family
- Messages
- 674
- Location
- South Wales, U.K.
For Father's Day, my daughter bought me a modern reprint of the 1932 edition of G.R.M. Devereux's "Etiquette for Men". It was a fascinating read for a number of reasons, but the admittedly brief sartorial section was particularly interesting. Here are a few nuggets of information which caught my attention, and hopefully may be of wider interest:
"Morning dress": now, I thought I knew what morning dress meant - i.e. tailcoat, striped trousers, etc. - but here from the context and parallelism ("...in most theatres ordinary morning dress may be worn ... In important London theatres, however, evening dress is more usual...") it can I think only mean what we might otherwise call day suit/lounge suit, or the "business dress" described below.
Business dress - "coat" and "vest" is used as opposed to "jacket" and "waistcoat" - the former is unsurprising, the latter perhaps more so. The choices given are a black coat and vest with striped trousers or a lounge suit, with the implicit expectation that one will have one suit for business wear (light coloured material is advised against as soon beginning to look shabby "unless... worn in exchange with one or two other suits"; dark suits are more economical as, presumably, stnding up to constant wear better). What is interesting is that as late as 1932 there is acceptance of wearing a wing collar with a lounge suit, and implicit encouragement to wear one ("more "dressy"") with a black coat. Soft collars should not be worn during business hours.
Week-end and holiday wear -grey flannels are still very popular but sports jackets have "lost favour" in favour of an "odd lounge jacket" or blazer (strictly with white flannels only)
More anon if anyone is interested!
"Morning dress": now, I thought I knew what morning dress meant - i.e. tailcoat, striped trousers, etc. - but here from the context and parallelism ("...in most theatres ordinary morning dress may be worn ... In important London theatres, however, evening dress is more usual...") it can I think only mean what we might otherwise call day suit/lounge suit, or the "business dress" described below.
Business dress - "coat" and "vest" is used as opposed to "jacket" and "waistcoat" - the former is unsurprising, the latter perhaps more so. The choices given are a black coat and vest with striped trousers or a lounge suit, with the implicit expectation that one will have one suit for business wear (light coloured material is advised against as soon beginning to look shabby "unless... worn in exchange with one or two other suits"; dark suits are more economical as, presumably, stnding up to constant wear better). What is interesting is that as late as 1932 there is acceptance of wearing a wing collar with a lounge suit, and implicit encouragement to wear one ("more "dressy"") with a black coat. Soft collars should not be worn during business hours.
Week-end and holiday wear -grey flannels are still very popular but sports jackets have "lost favour" in favour of an "odd lounge jacket" or blazer (strictly with white flannels only)
More anon if anyone is interested!