Information about White Tie
Prince Phillip and President George W. Bush in white tie, in company of Laura Bush and Queen Elizabeth II, during the Queen's 2007 U.S. visit.
White tie (evening dress, full evening dress in the U.K.) is the most formal dress code. In the United Kingdom civilian day court dress in the Royal court is like white tie. Yet, white tie has replaced it in formal state occasions, e.g. ambassadors at the State Opening of Parliament.
White tie's semi-formal counterparts are black tie and morning dress. (cf. Formal wear definitions)
Elements
Formal evening dress is strictly regulated, and properly comprising:- Black tailcoat with silk (ribbed or satin) facings, sharply cut-away at the front
- Black trousers with a single stripe of satin or braid in the US or two stripes in Europe
- White stiff-fronted cotton pique shirt
- White stiff wing collar
- White bow tie (usually cotton pique)
- White low-cut waistcoat (usually cotton pique, matching the bow tie and shirt)
- Black silk stockings
- Black patent leather pumps or shoes
At some state and heraldic occasions in Britain, knee-breeches, silk stockings and black buckled pumps are worn instead of trousers. This is particularly necessary where the garter of the Order of the Garter is intended to be worn.
Shirts, waistcoats and bow ties are now usually made of cotton marcella, although plain linen shirts and white or off-white silk ties and waistcoats are sometimes worn. Shirt studs and cufflinks should be silver or white. A white handkerchief and flower may be worn. At occasions of state, and in the presence of royalty, state decorations are worn by those who have been awarded them: miniature medals plus up to four breast stars, a narrow neck riband and a broad riband (sash). If a Knight of the Garter wears breeches, he wears his garter under his left knee. Ladies of the Garter wear theirs above their left elbow.
Outdoors a black silk top hat may be worn, with an opera cloak or overcoat. White gloves, scarf and cane are optional extras.
Variations
Military mess dress or hunt uniform may also be seen at a white tie event.National Dress
National costume may also be worn to white tie functions[1].Scottish Highland dress
As a specific example of national dress, Scottish Highland dress may also be worn at white tie events.
The traditional white tie version of Highland dress consists of:
- Black formal kilt jacket - the Prince Charlie coatee, Montrose doublet, Sheriffmuir doublet, Kenmore doublet or regulation doublet is suitable
- Black barathea (or velvet, with a velvet doublet) or white piqué waistcoat; no waistcoat is worn with the Kenmore doublet
- Kilt
- White piqué shirt with white studs and cufflinks
- White piqué bow tie with the coatee or regulation doublet; white lace jabot with the other doublets
- Black Ghillie brogues; black buckle brogues ("Mary Janes") may be worn with the Montrose, Sheriffmuir, or Kenmore doublet
- Tartan or red and white, red and black or blue and white diced kilt hose
- Flashes
- Sporran - formal type with a silver-mounted cantle-top and fur pouch or a full fur and animal mask type
Appropriate occasions
Like black tie, evening dress is generally worn only after 6 p.m. (see note 1 for an exception). Occasions include:- State dinners (e.g. dinners with visiting heads of state)
- Some Commemoration balls and May balls at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and the June Ball of University College Durham
- Hunt balls
- Some balls during the London Season
- Graduation ceremonies at some universities
- the Lord Mayor of London's Mansion House Banquet (though Gordon Brown famously ignores the dress code)
- Balls and cotillions
- Weddings
- Artistic premiers or the opening of an art season in large cities, such as the opera or ballet. The swallow-tail coat with long tails has become almost a cliché for concert pianists of the classical school.
In Japan for school graduation ceremonies, white tie is reserved for the "special dignitaries" such as the school principal and the teachers of the graduating students.
Conductors, classical pianists, and members of an orchestra or symphony playing classical music often are dressed in white tie.
Related forms of dress
White ties were historically worn by clerics and in the professions that formerly were filled by priests and minor clerics. In various forms they are still worn as part of:- Clerical dress (by persons in Holy Orders)
- Clerical dress (by clerks etc. in Parliament)
- Court dress (in courts of law)
- Court dress (in the Royal court)
- Academic dress (in the older universities such as Oxford, Cambridge, St Andrews and Durham)
Note
External links
- Definition of white tie
- Living Gentlemanly (the details of wearing White tie)
Clothing, like other aspects of human physical appearance, has various social aspects.
Wearing specific type of clothing or the manner of wearing clothing can have the deliberate purpose, or the desirable or undesirable side-effect, to correctly or incorrectly be
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Wearing specific type of clothing or the manner of wearing clothing can have the deliberate purpose, or the desirable or undesirable side-effect, to correctly or incorrectly be
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Motto
"Dieu et mon droit" [2] (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
"God Save the Queen" [3]
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"Dieu et mon droit" [2] (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
"God Save the Queen" [3]
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Court dress comprises two forms of dress: dress prescribed for Royal courts; and dress prescribed for courts of law.
This article deals primarily with dress worn in the courts of law of England and Wales and elsewhere in the English-speaking world.
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This article deals primarily with dress worn in the courts of law of England and Wales and elsewhere in the English-speaking world.
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United Kingdom
This article is part of the series:
Politics of the United Kingdom
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This article is part of the series:
Politics of the United Kingdom
- Sovereign: Queen Elizabeth II
- Parliament
- State Opening of Parliament
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Black tie is a dress code for formal evening events, whose primary component is the dinner jacket. The jacket and matching trousers are typically called a tuxedo in the United States and Canada; they are known in Continental Europe and Japan as a smoking
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History
The name originated from the practice of gentlemen in the nineteenth century riding a horse in the morning with a cutaway front single breasted morning coat...... Click the link for more information.
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A tailcoat, sometimes a swallow-tail coat is the coat traditionally worn by men for white tie dress, for very formal evening occasions.
A tailcoat is waist length in the front and sides, and has two long tails reaching to the knees in back.
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A tailcoat is waist length in the front and sides, and has two long tails reaching to the knees in back.
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Silk is a natural protein fiber, some forms of which can be woven into textiles. The best-known type of silk is obtained from cocoons made by the larvae of the silkworm Bombyx mori reared in captivity (sericulture).
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Satin is a cloth that typically has a glossy surface and a dull back. It is a warp-dominated weaving technique that forms a minimum number of interlacings in a fabric. If a fabric is formed with a satin weave using filament fibers such as silk, nylon, or polyester, the
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In American English, shirt can refer to almost any upper-body garment other than coats and bras (the term "top" is sometimes used in ladieswear). In British English, a shirt is more specifically a garment with a collar, cuffs, and a full vertical opening with buttons; what
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collar is the part of a shirt, dress, coat or blouse that fastens around or frames the neck. A collar may also be a separate or detachable accessory worn around the neck.
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Origins
The Oxford English Dictionary traces collar in its modern meaning to c. 1300...... Click the link for more information.
bow tie is a men's necktie popularly worn with formal attire, such as suits or dinner jackets. It consists of a ribbon of fabric tied around the collar in a symmetrical manner such that the two opposite ends form loops.
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waistcoat (sometimes called a vest or a vestee in Canada and the US) is a sleeveless upper-body garment worn over a dress shirt and necktie (if applicable) and below a coat as a part of most men's formal wear, and as the third piece of the three-piece male business
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Pique refers to a weaving style, as in "pique cotton", which is characterized by raised parallel cords or fine ribbing (for example, in the collar of a polo shirt or tennis shirt). Twilled cotton (see Twill) or corded cotton are close relatives.
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stocking is a close-fitting, variously elastic garment covering the foot and lower part of the leg. By analogy, the term is also used to describe a type of horse marking in which the white coloring extends from the horse's hoof to just above the knee.
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Patent leather is leather that has been given a high gloss, shiny finish. The original process was developed by Newark, New Jersey–based inventor Seth Boyden in 1818 with commercial manufacture beginning September 20, 1819.
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'pump' can mean many different types of shoe depending on the person using the word and where they are located.
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- A type of athletic shoe:
- In Britain it is one of many regional names for plimsoll shoes.
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A medal is a small metal object, usually engraved with insignia, that is awarded to a person for athletic, military, scientific, academic or some other kind of achievement. There also exist devotional medals, worn to indicate religious faith.
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Garter can refer to:
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- Garter (stockings), the item of clothing used to hold up stockings
- Suspenders, the item of clothing used to hold up pants
- Order of the Garter, a senior British order of chivalry
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The Most Noble Order of the Garter is a medieval English order of chivalry or knighthood, and the pinnacle of the British honours system. Membership in it is limited to the Sovereign, the Prince of Wales and no more than twenty-four members, or Companions; men are known as Knights
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Cotton is a soft fibre that grows around the seeds of the cotton plant (Gossypium sp.), a shrub native to tropical and subtropical regions around the world, including the Americas, India, and Africa.
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Linen is a material made from the fibers of the flax plant.'''
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Flax fiber
The term "linen" refers to yarn and fabric made from flax fibers; however, today it is often used as a generic term to describe a class of woven bed, bath, table and kitchen textiles because..... Click the link for more information.
A medal is a small metal object, usually engraved with insignia, that is awarded to a person for athletic, military, scientific, academic or some other kind of achievement. There also exist devotional medals, worn to indicate religious faith.
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top hat or top-hat (sometimes also known by the nickname "topper") is a tall, flat-crowned, broad-brimmed hat worn by men throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries.
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Mess dress is the military term for the formal evening dress worn in the mess or at other formal occasions. It is also known as mess uniform and mess kit. This style of military dress is largely restricted to the British, Commonwealth of Nations and United States
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worldwide view of the subject.
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National costume, also known as national dress, regional costume or folk dressPlease [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
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Scottish Highlands (A' Ghàidhealtachd in Gaelic) include the rugged and mountainous regions of Scotland north and west of the Highland Boundary Fault. The Great Glen divides the Grampian Mountains to the southeast from the Northwest Highlands.
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KILT is a call sign currently used on 2 radio stations in Houston Metropolitan area of Texas under the ownership of CBS Radio.
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- KILT-FM (Branded as 100.3 KILT) operates on frequency 100.3 FM with an Country format.
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Brogues, often called wingtips in the USA, are low-heeled shoes that are made of heavy and untanned leather, said to have originated in Scotland. Brogue also refers to Oxford shoes that have fringe or wing tips.
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