Bow tie
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The bow tie is a fashion accessory, popularly worn with other 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. Ready-tied bow ties are available, in which the distinctive bow is sewn into shape and the band around the neck incorporates a clip. The traditional alternative, consisting of a single strip of cloth, may be known as a "self-tie" bow tie to distinguish it. Bow ties are most commonly worn by men.
It originated among Croatian mercenaries during the European wars of the 17th century: the Croats used a scarf around the neck to hold together the opening of their shirts. This method was soon adopted (under the name Cravat) by the upper classes in France (then a leading country in the field of fashion) and flourished in the 18th and 19th centuries. The famous French writer Honoré de Balzac even wrote a book on the subject.
Towards the end of the 19th century the free ends of the bow tie grew longer, and the necktie was born, and the bow tie slowly went out of fashion in all but the architecture classes where it has remained a defining item of the architect's uniform.
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Although the necktie proves most prominent in today's society, being seen at business meetings, formal functions and sometimes even at home, the bow tie is making a comeback with fun-formal events such as dinner and cocktail parties, and nights out on the town. It is also still much more common to wear a bow tie with a tuxedo than it is to wear a necktie with one—previously the bow tie was the only proper neckware for a tuxedo.
The dress code of "black tie" requires a bow tie, though, paradoxically, it need not always be black these days. Most military mess dress incorporates a bow tie, which must always be of the self-tie type. For a military officer to wear a clip-on bow tie with mess-dress or dinner-jacket is regarded as a faux-pas, and in many regiments the offender will be required to purchase a significant quantity of champagne for his fellows, by way of a fine.
Bow ties are commonly seen in popular culture as items of sophistication, such as those worn by fictional spy James Bond. However, they have also been adopted into the "uniform" of clowns and male strippers. The bow tie is also often perceived as unfashionable, awkward, or affected. In the David Mamet film State and Main, one character remarks, "It's the truth that you should never trust anybody who wears a bow tie. Cravat's supposed to point down to accentuate the genitals. Why'd you wanna trust somebody whose tie points out to accentuate his ears?"
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Men known for their bow ties
曾蔭權 (Donald Tsang)
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Others include Fred Allen, Thomas Edison, Raj Bhakta, Chippendale Dancers, Bud Collyer, Robin Day, Peter Eisenman, Louis Farrakhan, Walter Gropius, C. Everett Koop, Janusz Korwin-Mikke, Matthew Lesko, Groucho Marx, Charles Osgood, Lester Pearson, Risto Penttinen, Lauri Rauramo, Orville Redenbacher, Norbert Schedler, Matti Sillanpää, Joseph Welch, Timothy White, George F. Will, and Presidents Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Johnson, Ulysses Grant, Rutherford Hayes, James Garfield, Grover Cleveland, and William McKinley.
Fictional characters known for their bow ties
- James Bond
- Jimmy Olsen
- The Smurfs
- Jack Point (the Simping Detective)
- Conan Edogawa
- Pee Wee Herman
- Donald Duck
- Opus the Penguin
- The Pink Panther
- Les Nessman
- Waylon Smithers
- Krusty the Klown
- Triumph, the Insult Comic Dog
References
External links
- How to tie a bow tie
- How to tie a bow tie
- How to tie a bow tie
- How to tie a bow tie with extra steps to make it easier to follow along, and adjust how tight or loose the tie is.
- Bow tie home pagede:Krawattenschleife