It’s well documented that in 1880, the rowing club at Oxford
University's Exeter
College, invented the first school
ties. After an emotional win over their rivals, they celebrated by removing
their ribbon hat bands from their boater hats and tying them, four-in-hand
around their necks. When they ordered a set of ties, with the colours from
their hatbands, they had accidentally created the modern school tie. Schools,
clubs, and athletic ties appeared in abundance. Some schools had different ties
for various grades, levels of achievement, and for graduates. Thanks to
historians and their method of accurate documentation all the original college colours
are still available from archived samples and replicate ties can be made to
order.
The four in hand knot used
to tie their hat ribbons, which later became one of the most popular
ways to tie a tie has its own unique origin. Coachman who lead a team of two
horses en route would take the four reins, two for each horse, and tie them in particular
fashion across their hand , thus four reins in hand, or, four in hand. Later
the knot and the phrase the coachman used were adapted to neckwear. Two unrelated occurrences made contribution to
a style that survives in tact to this day. And interestingly both working class
and upper class made equal contribution, the coachman’s phrase and the university
student boating hat band.
Let’s not leave Cambridge
University out of the race; they
also played a part in establishing an everlasting style, albeit forty five
years after the first Oxford school
tie. A Cricket Club, founded by a group of Cambridge
University students in 1845 is
believed to have created the first sporting colours. They designed a flag of
black, bright, orange-red, and gold, symbolizing "out of darkness, through
fire, into light." Blazers, caps, and ties were eventually created in these
colours.
It took another one hundred and twenty years before the tie saw
any significant change. In the 1920’s a pioneering Paris
fashion designer Jean Patou invented the designer silk tie. He made silk ties from
women’s clothing material. Targeted towards women purchasers, his expensive
ties were highly successful. In fact in America
three out of four ties are bought buy women.
Jesse Langsdorf an American tailor discovered that by
cutting the tie on the bias of the cloth, the tie would be much more resilient
and long- wearing. Cut slightly off bias, the tie would pull off-centre and
fall crookedly, but if cut at exactly 45 degrees, the aprons of the tie would
drape elegantly, straight down from the knot. He also constructed his ties
using three different pieces of silk (the blade, the gusset and the under end)
sewn together. He patented his idea and sold it to the world.
Throughout the ages the striped tie has remained a favourite
style of men who don’t want to step outside a conventional framework. Didn’t
some one once say “style is constant, fashion comes and goes”?
So maybe the next time you knot your favourite designer
silk ties four in hand around your neck, you’ll appreciate its colourful
history. A word of warning, when tying the knot, don’t’ think too hard about
the coachman pulling tight on the reins, ‘four in hand’, you might choke
yourself.
Article Source: http://www.theukarticledirectory.co.uk