Then there's the guys with buttons in their shirt instead of studs......
Then there's the guys with buttons in their shirt instead of studs......
I can't see the pix it's just a red x on my screen.
I can't see the pix it's just a red x on my screen.
Fascinating! Thanks for posting.I definitely think this is a case of differing social customs then - I dug out one of my old [ETA: Swedish] etiquette books (from 1933) and it states that white tie is worn at weddings, except at morning weddings. White tie is always correct for audiences (yes, at court) and funerals, no matter what time of day it is. It's also worn at formal dinners, balls and large parties, but, it says, the old custom of wearing white tie simply because it is your first visit as a guest to someone's home, isn't used anymore (never heard of that one, but there you are). On the other hand, it says that a dinner jacket is only ever worn at night (yes, it's actually bolded in my book so it's clearly a Rule). I think the difference is that a dinner jacket is for dining, while white tie is simply a man's best.
Anyway, remember that for your next visit to the Swedish court - no lounging about in morning wear just because it's early. Whip out your tails!
Fascinating! Thanks for posting.
And now to the hats! Top hats should be used together with white tie (not only at weddings and funerals). At festivities, the races etc. top hats may be worn together with morning wear. Younger gentlemen wear a chapeau claque which is commonly left in the cloakroom nowadays.
With dinner jacket one wears a black hat; that is a bowler; a soft, black hat; or a chapeau claque. But you may not wear a top hat or chapeau claque if you are not wearing a fur coat or a dark grey overcoat. If you wear an ulster or burberry, you have to wear a hard, low hat; i.e. a bowler hat.
Is this irony? Just in case it isn't, I'll offer some more gems from the same book (translated from Swedish by yours truly - does anyone now what a chapeau claque is, or is that called something else in English? It's a collapsing top hat, anyway):
I love old etiquette books. I have one listing 100 forms of parties from 1930, and it's hilarious. I have a dream of finding some other vintage fans and setting up a dinner club where we can try them out (they come with set menus and recipes).
Is this irony?
Just in case it isn't, I'll offer some more gems from the same book (translated from Swedish by yours truly - does anyone now what a chapeau claque is, or is that called something else in English? It's a collapsing top hat, anyway):
I love old etiquette books. I have one listing 100 forms of parties from 1930, and it's hilarious. I have a dream of finding some other vintage fans and setting up a dinner club where we can try them out (they come with set menus and recipes).
So if anyone is interested, I condensed the information I found re formal wear here and put it up at my poor history blog, which I have been neglecting for a while but fully mean to revive:
http://theragsoftime.blogspot.se/2012/07/what-to-wear-use-of-formal-wear-in.html