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Is/was there a "color code" for suspenders/braces in corporate US?

Abraham

One of the Regulars
Messages
166
Location
California Coast
Is there or was there a "color code" for wearing suspenders/braces in corporate US? Back around 1990 I was given a very nice set of red braces as I prepared to intern. A wise old sage in my office said that not only was I too young to wear braces, I also didn't hold the job title to justify wearing red braces. I asked him what he meant?

He said back in the day (post WWII), interns and clerks wore belts, not braces. Professionals wore black braces, middle managers wore navy blue or maroon braces and company executives wore red braces. I thought that was interesting but I never heard it anywhere else?
 

scotrace

Head Bartender
Staff member
Messages
14,392
Location
Small Town Ohio, USA
I believe that suspenders were a way for a man to express individuality. I remember seeing some pretty amazing patterns and designs, and guys used to show them off. Abercrombie & Fitch (before they were kid porn), used to have a big display of them with all kinds of whimsical patterns. I don't think (and it was not my experience) that there was a "code." Have a look at the suspenders Niles Crane wore in Frasier.

I wish I'd bought some from A&F at the time. I have a few pair by Brooks Bros. which I found in Filene's Basement in Boston on the cheap, but they're just silk in bright red and tan.
 
Last edited:
Messages
10,587
Location
Boston area
Every large corporation had (has?) something of a code of dress decorum. IBM Corp. was famous for very conservative suits and ties. The general work office rule in most companies (written or not) was to wear what the boss was wearing, which I think still applies. Another philosophy was (is?) to dress for the job you want, again looking up the ladder. I was once told by a Director of Marketing that I "shouldn't wear that tie again." I thought the tie in question was pretty conservative, but I never wore it again. On the positive side of that Marketing Director, the day I wore my Lee private label (the one in my avatar) he actually called me into his office to tell me how much he loved the hat. That was in 1981, and nobody was wearing hats. Almost nobody!
 

Bushman

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,138
Location
Joliet
I would place a bet that rainbow suspenders were likely frowned upon by everyone except Urkel.
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tropicalbob

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,954
Location
miami, fl
When I worked on Wall Street back in the '80's as a speechwriter and later compliance officer, I was attached to the legal dept. At the time there was a style called the "young fogey" look, which included three piece suits, wire-rimmed glasses, and, often, suspenders. I also wore high-button shoes that I got from Stacy Adams up in Harlem. What was great was that there was a wonderful little shop on Exchange Place where you could get beautiful suits with buttons for suspenders for a very reasonable cost. I chose to wear solid colors most of the time, but would occasionally sport some stripes. A couple of my colleagues, though, went for the wilder ones, some with little teddy bears printed on them, as I recall. Then again, some of us chose to wear our hair a bit longer than the norm, and we got away with it mainly because, well, we were the Legal Dept. I also remember that when they started drug-testing employees we were left alone - probably a good thing, too.
 

Cobden

Practically Family
Messages
788
Location
Oxford, UK
Certainly in conservative British offices (working on Whitehall, for example), you aren't permitted to wear braces with shirtsleeves, due to the British tradition of braces being almost "underwear" - something that is a functional and hidden.
 

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