Rottweiler
New in Town
- Messages
- 19
- Location
- Eugene, Oregon, USA
Ahoy gents,
One of the obvious differences between the sartorial rules for sweaters in the 1930s and more recent times is that you often see them tucked into the pants. I've only seen photos of this being done with pullovers.
A cardigan wouldn't be tucked. It would be treated exactly like a waistcoat, just a more casual type. If sleeveless, you even see it called "a knit waistcoat." Were pullovers thought of the same way? I wonder, because if you're wearing braces, they have to go over any top tucked into the pants, and braces were considered part of a man's underwear back when his shirt was seen as such. Which leads me to wonder a few things.
1) Was a pullover something a gentleman would wear under a waistcoat for warmth?
2) Was tucking the older way to wear it, or an innovation?
3) Was running around in just your trousers and a pullover over shirt and tie seen as rakishly casual when it became the college style?
One of the obvious differences between the sartorial rules for sweaters in the 1930s and more recent times is that you often see them tucked into the pants. I've only seen photos of this being done with pullovers.
A cardigan wouldn't be tucked. It would be treated exactly like a waistcoat, just a more casual type. If sleeveless, you even see it called "a knit waistcoat." Were pullovers thought of the same way? I wonder, because if you're wearing braces, they have to go over any top tucked into the pants, and braces were considered part of a man's underwear back when his shirt was seen as such. Which leads me to wonder a few things.
1) Was a pullover something a gentleman would wear under a waistcoat for warmth?
2) Was tucking the older way to wear it, or an innovation?
3) Was running around in just your trousers and a pullover over shirt and tie seen as rakishly casual when it became the college style?