11 corbatas para hombres audaces: pañuelo ascot, corbata de bolos y de cuerdas, y otras
Read our complete and more detailed guide here: https://gentl.mn/alternative-ties Video Credits: → Script: Preston Schlueter → Camera: Chris Dummer → Editing: Jonathan Oster Shop what you see in the video: Madder silk ascot tie in red and orange with arabesque: https://gentl.mn/37O5RkL Midnight blue socks with burgundy hidden stripe: https://gentl.mn/2JDdIKg Visit https://gentl.mn/shop and get 30% off any order of two or more ascots or cravats. Further discounts apply to orders of 3, 6, 9, 12, and more. Image credits: → Kelseybang.com → Etsy-Seller: Sirchamber →CNN → Tourdalmatia.com → BBC → Fox Hunting Shop → Holmestead Saddlery → Etsy-Seller: Firstfieldstocks → Etsy-Seller: Dogstarandoutfoxed →Friday Fox → Mary's Tack and Feed → Les Amis Du Circuit De Nivelles → Jim's Formal Wear → Etsy-Seller: Thenakedmanvintage → Cattlekate.com → Alex Streeter → Stag Provisions → Asos.com → Designs by Maral → Flashback → Miramax Films → Don Tullous, The Oklahoman Archives → Old Training Post → Etsy-Seller: Dashaclothing → Meganleephoto.com Stay up to date, subscribe to our newsletter: → https://gentl.mn/newsletter-and-ebook Want to see more videos? Subscribe to our channel! → http://gentl.mn/youtube-español Be part of the Gentleman's Gazette community - Support us on Patreon! →https://gentl.mn/patron ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Gentleman's Gazette: https://www.gentlemansgazette.com/ Fort Belvediere: http://gentl.mn/shop-fort-belvedere Facebook: / gentlemansgazette #differentties #alternativeties #notsponsored 0:00 Alternative Ties 01:10 Cravat 03:13 Stock Tie 04:47 Steinkirk Cravat 05:48 String Tie 06:15 Bolo Tie 07:44 Plantation Tie 08:09 Continental Tie Novelty Ties and Other Styles 09:44 Christmas Tie 09:45 Keyboard Tie 09:47 Leather Tie 09:49 Fish Tie A An alternative we don't cover in this video: 10:12 Rosette Tie Over time, the French term "croat" became "cravat" to refer to this neckwear. The fashion of wearing something decoratively around the neck dates back much further than the 17th century. However, it was these Croatian mercenaries who truly popularized it. In British English, the term cravat, also called a day cravat, generally refers to a more informal type of ascot worn under the collar of a shirt, which is very similar to the one I'm wearing here today. Although I should say that such dress cravats were no longer worn with morning coats at royal races in Edwardian times. The dress ascot is worn these days almost exclusively with morning coats, which we've also covered quite a bit in our complete guide to the morning coat, which you can find here. If you'd like to learn more about formal cravats and ascots, as well as how to tie them, you can check out these videos. After analyzing these styles, let's now take a closer look at the lesser-known and specialized options that have existed throughout history. We'll start here with the stock cravat, which is a close cousin of the ascot and cravat. It comes in two varieties: first, there's the shaped stock cravat. This is a single, long piece of sewn fabric, without pleats, with an opening in the back and center that makes tying the cravat easier. Then there's the folded stock cravat. This is folded lengthwise and ironed that way, but not sewn. It originally consisted of white neckbands made of starched linen or muslin. They were first used around 1730. Later, they were made in colors and with patterns, and became more similar to the cravats of today. On the other hand, shaped stocks, also called dress stocks or hunting stocks, are more similar to formal ascots; they are solid white and worn with pins. The pins for stock cravats are horizontal, similar to large safety pins, about three inches long, and are usually gold. They secure the ends of the cravat in a similar way to how a pin is used in a formal ascot. Stock cravats are most commonly worn today as part of British hunting attire. Shaped stocks are part of formal fox hunting attire, and pleated stocks belong to the less formal dress code known as "rat catcher." Hunters and horsemen often endorse the use of stocks, saying that, when necessary, they can be used to improvise bandages, slings, and other similar objects.

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