(Redirected from Suit (clothes))

At the Treaty of Versailles signing, in 1919, the heads of state wore
morning dress and lounge suits for informal meetings, but
frock coats for formal daytime meetings.
A man's 'suit' of clothes — and its variants: the 'lounge suit', 'business suit', 'three-piece suit', and 'two-piece suit' — is a garment made from the same cloth comprising:
★ A ''
coat'' (also: suit
jacket).
★ Matching ''
trousers'', (''
skirt'' for women).
★ A ''
waistcoat'' (''vest'' in U.S.), optionally.
A three-piece suit has a waistcoat; a two-piece suit does not.
The English word ''suit'' derives from the French word ''suivre'', meaning "to follow", i.e. the trousers and waistcoat follow the coat in cloth and colour.
A suit is generally accompanied by a
shirt and
tie (for men), or a
blouse (for women). A
hat such as the
fedora and the
bowler (for men), or the
pill box (for women), in Western countries, used to complete the outfit, but over the course of the 20th century these largely fell out of fashion and are no longer commonly worn with suits.
Men wear suits much more frequently than women. Women's suits, a later development than men's suits, are usually worn only in business settings. For other dressy occasions, women more frequently wear other styles of formal clothing.
Suits are sold in a range of methods. 'Off the Rack' often refers to a suit that is pre-made and ready for sale in various sizes. Made to measure suits are where the client is measured (often by tailors or seamstress') and the suit made to those measurements. Bespoke is similar to Made to Measure except the craft of making the suit is more refined and often completely performed by hand.
Some providers of Made to Measure suits such as
Xiushui (pronounced "Zoo-She") travel internationally measuring clients in various cities making the suits from traditional tailors in China sending the finished products to their clients. Providers such as Xiushii often base themselves in city located hotels or appartments to measure clients and display thier materials and styles of Made to Measure suits.
History
Men's suits

Matching coat, waistcoat, and breeches: Johann Christian Fischer by
Thomas Gainsborough, c. 1780.
The suit is the traditional form of male formal attire in the Western world. The modern suit did not appear until the early-to-mid nineteenth century, but the origins of its coat can be traced back to the revolution in men's dress set by
Charles II, king of
Great Britain in the 1660s. A particular style of this was adapted and popularized by British dandy
Beau Brummell by the early 1800s.
In the 1660s, restored English king Charles, following the example of the court of
Louis XIV at
Versailles decreed in 1666 that at court, men were to wear a long
coat or jacket, a
waistcoat (originally called a
petticoat, a term which later became applied solely to women's dress), a
cravat (ancestor of the modern
necktie), a
wig, and breeches or
trousers gathered at the knee, as well as a hat for outdoor wear.
By the early 1800s, Brummel's style trend led men in Europe to wear understated, beautifully cut, perfectly tailored versions, adorned with elaborately knotted neckwear. Brummell's stylistic influence is credited with introducing and bringing to fashion the move for a pared-down modern man's suit worn with necktie. He additionally popularized regular bathing for males which went with his versions of the suit. (Johnson, ''Birth of the Modern'')
Coats with matching trousers or even waistcoat have gone in and out of fashion over the last four centuries however the modern lounge suit coat is still derived from historical coats. Although it is hard to see the outline of the modern business suit coat in the elaborate and brightly-coloured court dress of the seventeenth century, the basic pattern has survived for more than four hundred years with some adjustments, despite the abandonment of
wigs and knee breeches after
the
French Revolution, the rise of British
tailoring, which used steam, pressure, padding, and stiffening to mould woolen fabric to the body, the invention of the modern
necktie in the late nineteenth century, and the gradual disappearance of waistcoats and hats during the last fifty years.
What we call the modern suit was originally a nineteenth-century English innovation in dress. Originally the term usually referred to a
lounge suit and was worn only in the country and at the seaside. At that time
morning dress and
frock coats were not part of a 'suit' because they were usually worn with non-matching striped trousers, and having matching
waistcoat and trousers was originally considered more informal. The term "ditto suit" was also transiently used due to the matching
waistcoat and trousers, these sometimes having coats more resembling a
frock coat or a
morning coat. The "sack suit" is a North America derivative of the English lounge suit which looked even looser and more casual because it lacked darts. In the nineteenth century, for more informal occasions, men still wore
morning dress as a more casual alternative to the formal
frock coats then considered appropriate business and day time
formalwear. The lounge suit was thus an even more casual form of dress and was reserved solely for recreation activities.

In 1901 the smartly dressed man wore a morning coat
The lounge suit became increasingly popular through the later nineteenth century as casual town daywear until it started to become an acceptable alternative to the
morning coat as town wear in the early twentieth century. As the lounge suit became increasingly popular, even the humblest men would have at least one suit to wear on Sunday to church as part of their "Sunday best." Victorian men who were able to afford it would still wear a
frock coat to church. Prior to 1935 (and again for a short time in the 1970's) men preferred their jackets and waistcoats to be fitted snugly. The trend since 1935 has been for loose fitting jackets. The
waistcoat or vest was worn regularly with the suit until
World War II when it fell out of fashion due to the loose style then in fashion. The waistcoast returned to fashion when the fitted style became prevalent once again in the the 1970's. This style quickly became associated with
disco music and culture. Movies like ''
Saturday Night Fever'' helped popularise the waistcoat as a fashionable piece of dresswear. The three-piece suit quickly became associated with the disco culture. The backlash against
disco quickly led to the demise of the popularity of three piece suits which were criticized as being "effeminate" by men such as
Steve Dahl who disapproved of disco and organized a campaign to get rid of anything associated with it. By 1983, the wearing of waistcoats had become a rare sight. This is exacerbated by the fact that men prefer loose fitting coats. A waistcoat that is not fitted properly will rise when one sits down and will quickly become uncomfortable.

Three men in slightly different versions of black tie.
At the end of the nineteenth century, an informal evening version of the lounge suit emerged in England, known as a
dinner jacket in
British English, in a dress code referred to as
black tie. When it was imported to the United States, it became known as as the
tuxedo or the penguin. The
dinner jacket was originally called a 'dress lounge' in England to indicate that it was a lounge suit for evening wear. The 'dress lounge' was originally worn only for small private gatherings and
white tie ('White tie and tails') was worn for large formal events. The 'dress lounge' slowly became more popular for larger events as an alternative to full evening dress in
white tie. As black tie grew in popularity, it has became increasingly acceptable as
formalwear and today has all but replaced
white tie, which today is only seen at ultra-formal occasions. The daytime formal equivalent to white tie is
morning dress, but in the
United States this too has become uncommon and the daytime semi-formal dress called the
stroller is more common. The stroller is itself a form of 'dress lounge' - a day time
semi-formal lounge suit version of
morning dress.
Women's suits

Women's walking suits, 1894, from the
Butterick pattern company's ''Delineator''

Women's Tailored Suits, 1937
The earliest women's suits were
riding habits, which consisted of a
tailored coat or jacket and matching skirt from the
1660s. Practical and sturdy, riding habits were worn not only on horseback, but also for travel and other daytime pursuits. Suits not intended for riding appeared in the later nineteenth century. Both riding habits and walking suits reflected the skirt and
sleeve styles of the day.
In the first half of the twentieth century, the skirted suit became the common daytime city costume for women, in the workplace and out;
dressmaker suits featured softer fabrics and "feminine" details, and
cocktail suits were worn for semiformal occasions in mid-century.
Under the influence of ''
Dress for Success'', a working woman's uniform of skirted suit, tailored shirt, and floppy tie evolved in the
1970s and
1980s.
Pantsuits (women's suits with trousers) were introduced by designer
André Courrèges in
1964 but were only gradually accepted as formal business attire.
Influence of casual dress
Over the past half-century, the wearing of suits has become far less common than it once was and is now restricted almost entirely to formal and business activities. During the 1990s, many businesses in North America adopted casual
dress codes, beginning with "casual Fridays" and then extending to the entire business week. The abandonment of a uniform dress code has led to considerable confusion over what is considered appropriate business wear. More recently, some businesses have reinforced the wearing of suits, although they may never again be as common as they once were.
According to Anne Hollander's book ''Sex and Suits'' (ISBN 1-56836-101-7), the origin of the suit was in European medieval
armor, which "replaced the naked human frame with another one that made a close three-dimensional, line-for-line commentary on it in another medium." Furthermore, "plate armor required an undergarment made by a linen-armorer, a close-fitting padded suit that outlined the whole man".
Styles

Smart double-breasted suit for greater formality
The majority of men's suits can be classified into one of five styles. 'Double-breasted' suits have two parallel rows of buttons; this style is considered very conservative. All other styles are single-breasted and may have various numbers of buttons, most commonly two or three. 'British' suits are characterized by moderately tapered sides, minimal shoulder padding, and two vents. 'Italian' suits are characterized by strongly padded shoulders, strongly tapered sides, and no vent. 'American' suits are considered more casual than the preceding styles, and are characterized by moderate shoulder padding, minimally tapered sides, and a single vent. 'Contemporary' is a term that includes a variety of recently designed garments that do not fit into the preceding categories.
Suit jackets in all styles typically have three or four
buttons on each cuff, which are often purely decorative (the sleeve is sewn closed and cannot be unbuttoned to open). Functional cuff buttons may be found on high-end or
bespoke suits; this feature is called a 'doctor's cuff'.
Extreme suits
Although the man's tailored suit is commonly perceived as the ultimate conservative costume of Western culture (see below), extravagant variations on the tailored suit have been adopted by many subcultures over the last century as a matter of fashion or social identity. As early as
1922,
Emily Post addressed what she termed the "freak American suit" in her influential guide ''Etiquette'':
:You will see it everywhere, on Broadway of every city and Main Street of every town, on the boardwalks and beaches of coast resorts, and even in remote farming villages. It comes up to hit you in the face year after year in all its amazing variations: waist-line under the arm pits, “trick†little belts, what-nots in the cuffs; trousers so narrow you fear they will burst before your eyes, pockets placed in every position, buttons clustered together in a tight little row or reduced to one. And the worst of it is, few of our younger men know any better until they go abroad and find their wardrobe a subject for jest and derision.
Some of the non-traditional tailored suit styles of the past century include:
★ The
Zoot suit of the
1930s and
1940s
★ The Western suit, a form of
western wear featuring a tailored jacket with "western" details such as pointed yokes or arrowhead pockets
★ The
Nudie suit, a highly decorated form of
western wear
★ The
Beatle suit or
Mod suit, a fashion of the
1960s with very narrow trousers and collarless jackets, derived from Edwardian suits,
The Master often wore this style of suit.
★ The
Disco suit, a fashion of the
1970s with exaggerated lapels and flared trousers, often in white or brightly-coloured
polyester fabric, the Jacket was based on the Jackets popular in the 1930s.
Perceptions
The uniform impression of a suit, often appearing in standard configurations such as ''
pinstripe suit'' or ''suit and tie'', can carry numerous connotations. In business settings it can communicate respectability and taste. In different milieus, the connotations of corporate life that the suit represents conveys unadventurous conformism. Extreme variations on the suit can convey the opposite (for example, many
pimps, or men wanting to be perceived as such, wear exaggerated versions of suits containing various hues, patterns, etc.).

Two-piece suits may also be used as
military uniform
Used as a
synecdoche, by referring to
management staff in
corporations as "suits", may express contempt for the perceived absence of imposed on members in a uniform elitist
bureaucracy. It may also be a comment on the perceived amorality of those who work for corporations.
The political and social dominance of the West in the world during the last century has led to the adoption of the suit as appropriate business and formal wear in almost every part of the globe. Refusing to wear a suit, therefore, can be a symbolic rejection of Western culture in some cases. For instance, some political leaders reject wearing business suits in order to send a message that they do not conform to Western patterns. The most notable example was probably the late Chinese leader
Mao Zedong, who usually appeared in public wearing what was nicknamed the
Mao suit in English. This suit was originally designed under the direction of
Sun Yat-sen for the
Chinese Republic, reflecting the need to create a uniquely Chinese dress for the new era. The "Mao suit" was worn by most Chinese political leaders (including
Chiang Kai-shek), until the mid-to-late 20th Century, and is known as the "Zhongshan (Sun Yat-sen) suit" (after its creator) in Chinese. Other alternatives to the western suit include national or tribal dress for African and Middle Eastern leaders, or military fatigues like
Cuba's
Fidel Castro. In more recent years, however, Castro has taken to wearing business suits in public appearances in lieu of his iconic revolutionary fatigues.
Women's suits today
In the 1990s, the return of the
miniskirt to the fashion world soon carried over into the office settings. Skirt length varies with fashion trends and acceptable local custom.
Suit etiquette for men
Buttoning the suit
Double-breasted suits are almost always kept buttoned. When there is more than one to fasten (as in a traditional six-on-two arrangement), only the top one need be fastened; in some configurations, the wearer may elect to button only the bottom button, in order to present a longer line (a style popularized by the
Prince George, Duke of Kent).
Today,
Single-breasted suits are buttoned while standing. This is due to the fact that the current trend is for jackets which are loose. Prior to 1935 and again during the 1970s, men preferred fitted jackets which could be worn either buttoned or unbuttoned whether one was standing or not. In a three-button suit, all but the bottom button can be done up. Today, however, if only one button is done up, it is the middle one, if two it is the middle and top ones. This is due to the fact that men today prefer their jackets to be made low-waisted. Prior to 1935, men preferred high-waisted coats and therefore the fashion was to button only the topmost button (if any was to be buttoned at all). In two button suits it is appropriate to button the top button, but never the bottom button only. If one is wearing a waistcoat, there is no need to button the jacket.
If one is wearing a four button suit, they may choose to wear the suit with two buttons done up (the middle two) or all of the top three. It is the fashion with a four button suit to keep it buttoned when sitting.
When a bespoke jacket has working buttons on the cuff, some men like to leave some of these undone to demonstrate that they can afford to wear a bespoke suit, but it is more proper to fasten all the buttons. A bespoke suit should be understated.
Suit colours
In the past (especially in the 1920s and 1970s), suits were made in a wide array of colours. Today, business-suits are usually made in
navy blue,
grey, and charcoal. Browns and darker shades of green have returned to fashion (these colours had previously been popular in the 1970s and also prior to 1935) although these colours are still not widely accepted by more conservative men.
Black is traditionally a colour reserved for one's dinner jacket (
tuxedo), but may be worn in religious contexts such as to a funeral or religious function.
Pattern

Classic pinstripe business suit gives a professional image
Traditional suits are generally solid colours or
pinstripes, with refined plaids such as the traditional
Glen plaid sometimes qualifying. The colour of the patterned element (stripes, plaid checks) varies by gender. Navy blue and charcoal are considered smart staples of the suitwearer's wardrobe. A pinstriped suit is conventionally associated with conservative businessmen but many designers have made sharp pinstriped suits more fashionable and cutting edge.
Ties with suits
Main articles: Necktie
Working with neckties is very much a matter of personal taste, but in conservative terms there are some basic guidelines. Ties should always be darker than the wearer's shirt. The background colour of the tie should not be the same as that of the shirt, while the foreground of the tie should contain the colour of the shirt and thereby "pick up" on the colour of the shirt. Ideally, the tie should also integrate the colour of the suit in the same way. Generally, simple or subdued patterns are preferred for conservative dress, though these are terms with a wide range of interpretation. Some of the most common knots are the
Four-in-hand, the
Half-Windsor, the
Windsor (or Full-Windsor), and the
Shelby or Pratt. A Four-in-hand, Half-Windsor, or Windsor is generally the most appropriate with a suit, particularly by contemporary guidelines. Once properly knotted and arranged, the bottom of the tie should just touch or just go over
the top of the belt buckle. The thin end should never extend below the wide end.

A fashionable tie complements a sharp suit
Appropriate etiquette should be followed when wearing neckties that indicate membership in a corporate body: many ties made for the American market display
heraldic devices or come in "regimental stripe" patterns that could be mistaken for an official organisational tie in European circles.
It has become fashionable to wear a suit without a tie and with an open necked shirt among young men.
Shirts with suits
Main articles: Dress shirt
The type of shirt worn by men with a suit is a top made of woven
cloth, with long sleeves, a full-length buttoned opening down the front, and a collar; this type of garment is known in
American English as a dress shirt or Oxford shirt but simply as a shirt in other English dialects. It is ironed, neatly tucked into its wearer's trousers, and otherwise worn according to the etiquette described in the article
dress shirt.
The classic shirt colours are light blue or white, with white edging out as most conservative. The most formal type of dress shirt worn with a standard suit is a shirt with
linked cuffs, but not French, using
cuff links or
silk knots instead of buttons to close the sleeves, but this type of shirt is optional, and essentially up to the preferences of the wearer and the vagaries of fashion.
The most traditional collar is a spread
collar. This is frequently the default collar type for French cuff shirts, though they can sometimes be found with point collars. Normally button-down collars are reserved for casual use with a sportcoat or without a coat at all. The button-down collar is not seeing as much wear today, particularly with the resurgence of more formal shirts with spread collars and French
cuffs, even in business casual wear.
Socks with suits
In the United States it is common for socks to match the trouser leg. This makes the leg appear longer and minimizes the attention drawn by a trouser leg tailored to be too short. A more general rule is for socks to be darker than the shade of trousers, but potentially a different colour.
[1] With patterned socks, ideally the background colour of the sock should match the primary/background colour of the suit. If it is not possible to match the trouser leg, socks may match one's shoes.
Comedians like
Jerry Lewis (in the past) and then-Supreme Court Associate Justice
Thurgood Marshall have been known to wear white socks with their suits. Though it may have been fashionable to wear them in the
1950s, black or other dark dress socks are much preferred to white socks for most occasions.
Accessories with suits

A pinstriped navy blue suit, with a grey one in the background, necktie and
pocket square.
Acceptable colours for belts (if worn) and shoes are black and burgundy/cordovan, though since the 1980s various shades of darker browns (particularly mahogany) have started to gain acceptance. Light browns such as saddle tan should be reserved for use with business casual wear. The belt and shoes must match one another, at the very least in colour category if not almost exactly in shade. The belt's buckle should be silver or gold. Other metallic objects worn with the suit (such as
cuff links,
tie bar,
tie tack,
watch) should match the belt buckle. However, in more conservative circles, especially in the UK, a belt should never be worn with a suit. A suit made by an English tailor will not have belt loops and the trousers should be kept in place by either adjustable side fasteners or
braces (US: suspenders). Where watches are concerned: the more formal the occasion, the thinner the watch. Analogue watches are more formal than digital watches. In the most formal situations, a
pocket watch, or no watch at all, should be worn. The pocket watch should also match the other metal objects in size and colour. Leather-soled shoes are traditional and traditionally have a more "dressy" appearance. Some companies also make dress shoes with wooden soles.
Handkerchiefs and pocket squares/silks in the upper welt (chest) pocket are not especially common in today's formal dress. Originally, handkerchiefs were worn partially protruding from the left jacket sleeve. Over time, they migrated to the breast pocket. When silk was still a rare and expensive commodity, they were considered a flamboyant extravagance by conservative commentators. By the end of the nineteenth century, however, they had become a standard accoutrement for gentlemen.
Suit etiquette for women

A lady wearing a standard womens suit
Suit-wearning etiquette for women generally follows the same guidelines used by men. Only the differences are described here.
For women, a
blouse (usually white) takes the place of a shirt. Blue and pink blouses are also seen. Women have more leeway in selecting their top than men have in selecting their shirt. Sometimes a high-quality knit top replaces the blouse; this is not universally accepted but is common, particularly if the top is made of a luxurious material.
Women generally do not wear neckties with their suit. Fancy silk
scarves that resemble a floppy
ascot tie were popular in North America in the 1970s, worn with pant suits. At that time women entered the
white-collar workforce in large numbers and their dress fashions imitated men's business wear. The scarves are not popular in contemporary usage; most women pair their suit with either a subdued
necklace or no neckwear at all(as in picture).
References
1. http://thesartorialist.blogspot.com/2006_07_01_thesartorialist_archive.html
External links
★
Emily Post's ''Etiquette'': The Clothes of a Gentleman, 1922
★
GQ Style Guy on men.style.com - Suits and Blazers