Hello again.
I'm looking for an evening tailcoat for ballroom standard dancing (i.e. watzer, foxtrot, tango and alike). Vintage is an option, but online tailor is another (I cannot afford more than 500€). After an initial suggestion of my teacher and a very bad experience with an unexpensive dinner suit I own, I searched the web for some insight about what to look for when searching a dress suitable for dancing or orchestra directors.
I found two links on the subject, very informative (the first thanks to this forum):
http://mrlapel.blogspot.it/2008/04/its-all-in-armholes.html
http://www.blacktieguide.com/White_Tie/White_Tie_Tailcoat.htm (look on the left column for the term "scye")
Especially the first post is eye opening, about how a high scye makes a day & night difference about the dress behavior once a dancer is raising both arms in the typical closed posture.
However they lack to say how high is high! I measured some of my jackets, including a dinner suit jacket, calculating the difference between the typical "Shoulder seam to cuff" and "Underarm seam to cuff" that ranged around 8.7 inches (22 cm), size approximately equal measuring the armo hole "height" from in side the jacket. All the jacket this style become ugly once I raise both my hands.
I then checked online for vintage tailcoats (around 1940-1950) and, when both measures were reported, the difference calculate to approx 7.7 inches (19.5 cm), so just a little less.
Does anybody have a correct understanding how tall (small) should be the armhole (scye) for an evening tailcoat (but should be a general recommendation) to be still wearable but offer minimum deformation when both arms are raised, and at the same time leaving freedom of movements?
I also read somewhere (I could not find it again) that in order to be suited for ball, we should make sure to ask the tailor to place the sleeves straight. I am not sure what it means, but maybe somebody may have additional sartorial insights for my purpose?
Also of note, this post:
http://www.permanentstyle.co.uk/2012/01/kilgour-recreates-fred-astaires-tails.html
Which reads: "small technical details that made the tails easier to dance in, including a particularly large sleevehead and exaggerated rope on the shoulder, in order to accommodate the sleeve" - which I don't quite understand. Maybe is important also the heavy 130s cloth that makes it more "cast on"?
Thank you very much for sharing your idea or experience.
Ascanio
I'm looking for an evening tailcoat for ballroom standard dancing (i.e. watzer, foxtrot, tango and alike). Vintage is an option, but online tailor is another (I cannot afford more than 500€). After an initial suggestion of my teacher and a very bad experience with an unexpensive dinner suit I own, I searched the web for some insight about what to look for when searching a dress suitable for dancing or orchestra directors.
I found two links on the subject, very informative (the first thanks to this forum):
http://mrlapel.blogspot.it/2008/04/its-all-in-armholes.html
http://www.blacktieguide.com/White_Tie/White_Tie_Tailcoat.htm (look on the left column for the term "scye")
Especially the first post is eye opening, about how a high scye makes a day & night difference about the dress behavior once a dancer is raising both arms in the typical closed posture.
However they lack to say how high is high! I measured some of my jackets, including a dinner suit jacket, calculating the difference between the typical "Shoulder seam to cuff" and "Underarm seam to cuff" that ranged around 8.7 inches (22 cm), size approximately equal measuring the armo hole "height" from in side the jacket. All the jacket this style become ugly once I raise both my hands.
I then checked online for vintage tailcoats (around 1940-1950) and, when both measures were reported, the difference calculate to approx 7.7 inches (19.5 cm), so just a little less.
Does anybody have a correct understanding how tall (small) should be the armhole (scye) for an evening tailcoat (but should be a general recommendation) to be still wearable but offer minimum deformation when both arms are raised, and at the same time leaving freedom of movements?
I also read somewhere (I could not find it again) that in order to be suited for ball, we should make sure to ask the tailor to place the sleeves straight. I am not sure what it means, but maybe somebody may have additional sartorial insights for my purpose?
Also of note, this post:
http://www.permanentstyle.co.uk/2012/01/kilgour-recreates-fred-astaires-tails.html
Which reads: "small technical details that made the tails easier to dance in, including a particularly large sleevehead and exaggerated rope on the shoulder, in order to accommodate the sleeve" - which I don't quite understand. Maybe is important also the heavy 130s cloth that makes it more "cast on"?
Thank you very much for sharing your idea or experience.
Ascanio
Last edited: