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Encyclopedia > Tailcoat
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Bandleader Vincent Lopez in white tie, early 1920s

Evening dress (also known as full evening dress) or white tie is the most formal dress code that exists for civilians today.1


There exists a semi-formal counterpart known as black tie and a formal day time equivalent known as morning dress.

Contents

What it is

Evening dress is more regimented than other forms of dress, and properly consists of:

Enlarge
HM the Queen with Commonwealth Prime Ministers, in the 1950s. To her right, Sir Winston Churchill; to her left, Robert Menzies of Australia and Louis St. Laurent of Canada. They wear evening dress or white tie.

Shirts, waistcoats and bow ties are now usually made of cotton marcella, although plain linen shirts and 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).


Outdoors a black silk plush top hat is appropriate, with an opera cloak or overcoat, even during the summer. White gloves, scarf and cane are optional extras.


When it is worn

White tie in use at a commemoration ball
White tie in use at a commemoration ball

Like black tie, evening dress is generally only worn after 6 p.m. (see note 1 for an exception). Occasions that require white tie are increasingly rare, but in the United Kingdom these still include:

  • State dinners (e.g. dinners with visiting heads of state)
  • Commemoration balls and May balls (at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge respectively)
  • Hunt balls
  • Some balls during the London Season

In Austria and elsewhere in Continental Europe there are many balls where white tie is worn.


Conductors 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:

Note

1 In the United Kingdom civilian day court dress (in the Royal court) is similar to white tie, but nowadays white tie is worn in its place to the most formal state occasions, e.g. by foreign ambassadors at the State Opening of Parliament. This is the case even though such occasions occur during the day.


External link

  • Definition of white tie (http://www.cam.ac.uk/societies/cuhags/whitetie/defn.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
British police - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2194 words)
The first uniform, which was a lighter blue than at present, was a high-collared tailcoat, worn with white trousers in summer.
The headgear was a hardened top hat, which served the dual purpose of protecting the officer from blows to the head and allowing him to use it as a step to climb or see over walls.
The tailcoat was later replaced by a tunic, still high-collared, and the top hat by the helmet (both adopted by the Metropolitan Police in 1863).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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