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White Tie - Double striped trousers

geo

Registered User
Messages
384
Location
Canada
So, what thread should be used when stitching the side stripes to the trousers? Cotton thread or silk thread? I think that silk is best, because cotton would be too visible against the silk background of the stripe. Or, should one use cotton on dinner jacket trousers, because they are less formal, and silk for tails trousers, to account for the higher formality level? I'm confused.
 

manton

A-List Customer
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360
Location
New York
geo said:
So, what thread should be used when stitching the side stripes to the trousers? Cotton thread or silk thread? I think that silk is best, because cotton would be too visible against the silk background of the stripe. Or, should one use cotton on dinner jacket trousers, because they are less formal, and silk for tails trousers, to account for the higher formality level? I'm confused.
The way it is normally done, you don't see the stitch -- it's on the inside. Silk thread is typically used for the hand sewing of curved seams, like armholes. A straight machined seam like a trouser outseam is likely to be done with cotton thread.
 

Happy Stroller

One of the Regulars
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manton said:
My book is actually being translated into Chinese, if you can believe that. It's the only foreign rights I've sold so far.
=================== End of quote =====================

Yes, Manton, I really like your book. In fact, read it over and over again several times.

Regarding the blazer, not only could I not figure out what was serge, so were hopsack and fresco another two cloths of unknown familiarity to me.

I do look forward to the distribution of The Suit in Chinese. There are many sartorial words which I wish I knew their Chinese equivalent. Using the Chinese edition in parallel with the English edition should be a great help towards improving my knowledge of Chinese so that I can communicate with the Shanghainese clothiers much more effectively.

So, when can we expect the Chinese edition to be out?
 

Happy Stroller

One of the Regulars
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Location
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Quote:Originally Posted by Marc Chevalier
When it comes to being "comrades in the Revolution", I'm more a Menshevik than a Bolshevik. Extremism of any kind repels me.

manton said:
Well, no worries, then. There won't be a revolution. And if there were, the people trying to restore classic dress would all end up on the guillotine.
=================== End of quotes ====================

Eventually, the Mensheviks won out w/o going to the guillotine because none were available, I think, by the time the Berlin Wall crumbled. That's why good ol' Marc is still around.

The same for the unfinished revolution in China. When the Chinese edition of The Suit comes out, the great restoration of the classic dress in China will occur w/o people going to the guillotine, save for the Madame Tussuade museum in Beijing. We all know to hold who responsible when China becomes the largest sartorial colony of England.
 

Happy Stroller

One of the Regulars
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Marc Chevalier said:
If I didn't know better, Happy Stroller, I'd say that you're my friend Nathan Marsak in disguise ...

.
=================== End of quote =====================

Sorry, Marc, I'm not that chap. Clue, I am a true blue Chinaman if you haven't figured out that one yet.
 

Happy Stroller

One of the Regulars
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136
Location
Earth
The Wingnut said:
I've examined my double striped trousers. It's definitely two ribbons, the ribbons are sewn on either side of the seam and have a satin band facing the seam. The pockets are along the seam of the trousers and the ribbon runs up the edge of hte pocket. I like this, it's actually a nice touch. If your hadns aren't in them, you'd never know they were there.
===================== End of quote ====================

Hi, Wing Nut
Can you see the threads on the face of the satin stripes on both edges of the same stripe?
 

Happy Stroller

One of the Regulars
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136
Location
Earth
The Wingnut said:
Does anyone have a picture of the double stripe? I've a pair of formal trousers I suspect are double stripe but have no way of verifying this without knowing exactly what to look for.

I have an absolutely incredible double-breasted late '30s Bond Clothiers tux with single-stripe trousers. It's just a simple grosgrain ribbon about 1/2" wide going up the side seam.

The other pair of trousers, on the other hand, has a thick cord in the middle, with a ribbon on either side. Never gave it much thought, I simply figured it was a different style of hiding the seam. This thread has made me consider it more in depth.
===================== End of quote ======================

Wingman, can you see any stitching on the thick central cord? Are there one on each side that connect the cord to each of the two ribbons?

For the single stripe trousers, do you see any stitching on the face of the stripe next to each of the edges?

Do you have a double-striped trousers where the two ribbon stripes are separated by the cloth material that is used for the pair of trousers itself?
 

Marc Chevalier

Gone Home
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18,192
Location
Los Feliz, Los Angeles, California
.


I hope the following photos will resolve the stripe-placement controversy once and for all.




Note the placement of the double stripes on this pair of tailcoat trousers:


2e_1.jpg
4f_1.jpg





Now, here is a pair of dinner jacket trousers:


a2_1.jpg



.
 

Tomasso

Incurably Addicted
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13,719
Location
USA
Photoshopped?

Marc Chevalier said:
I hope the following photos will resolve the stripe-placement controversy once and for all.
.
Photoshopped? [bad]
 

Marc Chevalier

Gone Home
Messages
18,192
Location
Los Feliz, Los Angeles, California
Not exactly. The dinner jacket trousers have a wee bit of embellishment on the stripe. This was common on European evening trousers. Note that the tailcoat trousers have literally two different, parallel strips of fabric sewn onto each leg.


.
 

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