Lancealot
Practically Family
- Messages
- 623
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- Greer, South Carolina, United States
Just curious what hat best goes with a tuxedo (besides a topper)?
[bad] That's where you should stop.......ThesFlishThngs said:See, I know nothing
Or get yourself dragged outside and stoned, depending on the event.Ephraim Tutt said:Wear a baseball cap and set a new trend!
cptjeff said:Or get yourself dragged outside and stoned, depending on the event.
Lancealot said:Would a bowler be appropriate?
Miss 1929 said:Top hats are only worn with white tie and tails or with morning suit (like the Monopoly Man!).
Never with a dinner jacket, aka a tuxedo, be it single- or double-breasted.
With a tuxedo (which is 20s slang for the dinner jacket as it was invented to wear when dressing for dinner in the wild environs of the gated community of Tuxedo), one may wear a Homburg (which is slightly more formal than a fedora due to the binding on the brim and the slightly stiffer felt), or in the summer, you may wear a boater, as Fred Astaire does in more than one of his films. No boaters in the winter!
You can also go bare-headed when in dinner jacket, but what fun is that?
avedwards said:This discussion has gone on before, but I'll repeat what Lokar said and add what was also agreed previously.
Historically speaking a top hat was worn, though the look is improved if you wear a long (appropriate) overcoat or even a cape as this balances out the height of the hat.
A black or midnight blue homburg became the norm in the 1930s, so you can't go wrong with this.
A black or grey fedora was worn in the 40s and 50s (my guess is that the average person could only afford one hat so that one hat was used).
So historically speaking a topper, a homburg and a fedora can all be worn with a dinner jacket.
A bowler is not appropriate, however if worn with an overcoat you could get away with this.
As my post shows, the rule of homburg only doesn't apply. With being "allowed" to wear a fedora, a topper or a homburg there's not much rigidity. However, some hats would look wrong with a dinner jacket (a tweed hat for example) because they would just look displeasing to the eye.HadleyH said:With all respect ... who cares what is appropiate or not as long as it looks fine, why so much rigidity? one has to break the rules sometimes, that's what fashion and style is all about, even in the 20s and 30s rules were broken .... and good things came out of it!
... my humble opinion. [huh]
avedwards said:However, I break rules when I feel that a combination is visually pleasing, if not satorially correct.
HadleyH said:Be different and dare! wear a white trilby, like Spike Lee did at the Oscars!
Don't forget to wear a bowtie though!