The new black tie
Country Life UK|March 16, 2022
Standard-issue black tie might still fit the bill for awards dinners and rugby-club shindigs, but, elsewhere, a new generation of men is becoming more creative when it comes to dressing up
Arabella Youens
The new black tie

ALTHOUGH there has been a progressive loosening of standards across some sectors of society, the desire to make a sartorial effort in the evenings is experiencing renewed vigour. Two years of social hibernation has encouraged many not only to dust off their formal clothes, but to wear them with confidence, personality—and a healthy dose of flamboyance.

As anyone who has ventured out to a party recently will attest, the black-tie dress code for men is undergoing something of a transformation. Led by a desire to look smart, but be more expressive, rules are being re-written (or torn up). No longer is it necessary to adopt a monochrome silhouette made up of a silk-lapelled jacket, matching trousers, a crisp white shirt and classic bow tie. “Now, it is much more about expressing one's personal character,' says Oliver Spencer, founder of formalwear designers Favourbrook. 'It can be something simple such as an accessory, a bow tie or a waistcoat, or even more decoratively through a jacket.'

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