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Bow Ties

scotrace

Head Bartender
Staff member
Messages
14,376
Location
Small Town Ohio, USA
My game is still stalled.

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Strapped-4-Cache

One Too Many
Messages
1,112
Location
Lawrenceville, GA
I posted to your comment in another thread. Think of it as tying a shoelace under your chin, with a really wide lace.

The trick is to remember to hold the first part of the bow well enough to slip the bow from the other side behind it without losing the grip on everything. Kind of difficut at first, but when you've done it a few times you'll wonder why it seemed so hard at first.

It helped me to watch myself slowly tie my shoelaces and watch how the looped parts of the bow interacted. I'm willing to bet that learing to tie one of those skinny (non-wavy) bow ties is probably easier than learning to tie a butterfly tie.
 

Cattus Petasatus

One of the Regulars
Messages
250
Location
Richardson, TX
Up to this point all my bow ties have been "Wi-Ties".... They are tied by my wife.

She taught me how, and I was amazed at how easy it was. However that was a few days ago and my fingers have forgoten how to do it.
 

Quetzal

One of the Regulars
Messages
147
Location
United States
18b47b2e2ef0119770cd18c9c24c187c.jpg

No idea about the era of this one, but it's the first bow tie I've run across in my usual haunts.

What we have here is the Bow-variant of the Four-In-Hands made during the Bold Look. Congratulations, you've found a 1940s Clip-On Bow!

Recently, I've found one very shiny striped bow from the 1950s, and a Linen bow that may be modern, but still found at Goodwill and has a neat design. It's VERY hard to find a bow in a thrift store, but they're out there.

-Quetzal
 
Messages
13,635
Location
down south
Awesome! Thanks for the input.
The thrift store I found it in is one that I've had very good luck in the past finding 40s & 50s ties, but like I said, this is the first bow.
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
24,789
Location
London, UK
I posted to your comment in another thread. Think of it as tying a shoelace under your chin, with a really wide lace.

The trick is to remember to hold the first part of the bow well enough to slip the bow from the other side behind it without losing the grip on everything. Kind of difficut at first, but when you've done it a few times you'll wonder why it seemed so hard at first.

It helped me to watch myself slowly tie my shoelaces and watch how the looped parts of the bow interacted. I'm willing to bet that learing to tie one of those skinny (non-wavy) bow ties is probably easier than learning to tie a butterfly tie.

The shoelaces analogy I found helpful too. That and some good videos on youtube. I realised a couple of years ago I techincally do it a bit "wrong" because I put the second loop to the front rather than behind the first one, but having tried it both ways, it makes no appreciable difference to the end result for me, so. I've never owned a single-ended bow, of course.....

Thank you - I've just had my first successful go. Not perfect, but I'm happy. A start.

Brooks Brothers tie. Not sure of age. Quite floppy.

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Practice is all it takes. I wear a bow to the office three or four days a week; once you do it regularly, it's as easy as a four in hand.
 

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