Dictionary Definition
waistcoat n : a man's sleeveless garment worn
underneath a coat [syn: vest]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- wās'kōt, /ˈweɪskəʊt/, /"weIsk@Ut/
- (old-fashioned) wĕs'kət, /ˈwɛskət/, /"wEsk@t/
Noun
- A sleeveless, collarless garment worn over a shirt and under a suit jacket.
Synonyms
- vest (US)
Translations
- Czech: vesta
- French: gilet
- German: Weste (de)
- Icelandic: vesti
- Italian: panciotto , gilè , corpetto
- Japanese: chokki (ja), besuto (ja)
- Portuguese: colete
- Spanish: chaleco , chalequillo
- Swedish: väst
- Turkish: yelek
References
Extensive Definition
A waistcoat (sometimes called a wescot, vest or a vestee in Canada and the
US)
is a sleeveless upper-body garment worn over a dress shirt
and necktie (if
applicable) and below a coat as a
part of most men's formal wear,
and as the third piece of the three-piece male business
suit. Once a virtually mandatory article of men's clothing, it
has become uncommon in contemporary dress in the English-speaking
world, although it has returned to fashion as part of businesswear
in Germany.
Waistcoats have now become a
popular item of clothing amongst the youth of Britain as style icon
Kate
Moss and the members of indie band Razorlight wear
them over casual shirts and jeans for a day-to-day fashionable
look.
Characteristics and use
A waistcoat (as distinguished from other vests,
such as the tank
top), has a full vertical opening in the front which fastens
with buttons or snaps.
Both single-breasted
and double-breasted
varieties exist, regardless of the formality of dress, but
single-breasted examples occur far more commonly in all cases. When
producing a three-piece
suit, manufacturers cut the waistcoat from the same material as
the jacket and
trousers.
In white tie and
black
tie dress the waistcoat normally matches the tie. However,
white waistcoats are sometimes acceptable in black tie (for
example, with a white jacket ); and waiters and other servants at
white-tie events sometimes wear so-called grey tie to
distinguish themselves from guests: the tailcoat of white tie with
the black waistcoat and tie of black tie dress. Morning
dress permits more variation. Less strict modern formal dress
(seen for example at weddings) often permits colored
bow ties
in otherwise black or white tie dress, and the waistcoat may match
these as well.
Before wristwatches became popular,
a gentleman would keep
his pocket watch
in the front pocket of his waistcoat, attached to one of the
buttons with a watch-chain and fob. This
remains acceptable, though uncommon. Wearing a belt with a
waistcoat counts as bad form; instead, one should wear braces
(suspenders in the
United
States) underneath it.
History
The waistcoat is one of the few pieces of clothing whose origin historians can date precisely. King Charles II of England, Scotland and Ireland introduced the waistcoat as a part of correct dress during the Restoration of the British monarchy. Samuel Pepys, the diarist and civil servant, wrote in October 1666 that "the King hath yesterday in council declared his resolution of setting a fashion for clothes which he will never alter. It will be a vest, I know not well how". This royal decree provided the first mention of the waistcoat. Pepys records "vest" as the original term; the word "waistcoat" derives from the cutting of the coat at waist-level, since at the time of the coining, tailors cut men's formal coats well below the waist (see frock coat or morning coat).During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
men often wore incredibly elaborate and brightly-coloured — even
garish — waistcoats, until fashion in the nineteenth
century restricted them in formal wear, and the development of the
suit dictated that informal
waistcoats become the same colour as the rest of a man's
outfit.
After the French
Revolution of 1789, anti-aristocratic sentiment in France (and
elsewhere in Europe) influenced the wardrobes of both men and
women, and waistcoats followed, becoming much less elaborate. After
about 1810 the fit of the waistcoat became shorter and tighter,
becoming much more secondary to the frock-coat overcoat and almost counting as
an undergarment, although its purpose and popularity were larger
than ever. With the advent of dandyism in the early 19th
century, the waistcoat started to change roles, moving away from
its function as the centerpiece of the visual aspect of male
clothing, towards serving as a foundation
garment, often with figure-enhancing abilities. From the 1820s
onwards elite gentlemen — at least those among the more fashionable
circles, especially the younger set and the military — wore corsets. The waistcoat served to
emphasize the new popularity of the cinched-in waist for males, and
became skin-tight, with the overcoat cut to emphasize broader
shoulders, a pouting chest, and a nipped-in waist. In the absence
of a corset, men's waistcoats often featured whalebone stiffeners and were
laced in the back, with reinforced buttons up the front, so that
one could pull the lacings in tight like a corset to mould the
waist into the fashionable silhouette. Albert,
Prince Consort of Queen
Victoria, had a reputation for his tight corsets and tiny
waist; although he lacked popularity during his early years as the
husband of Victoria, men followed his style, and waistcoats became
even more restrictive. This fashion remained throughout the 19th
century, although after about 1850 the style changed from that of a
corseted look to a straighter line, with less restriction at the
waist, so that the waistcoat followed a straighter line up the
torso. Toward the end of the century, the Edwardian look
made a larger physique more popular due to the popularity of
Edward
VII and his large figure.
The waistcoat remained a required part of men's
business clothing, and even casual dress, until the mid-twentieth
century. Part of its popularity stemmed from the fact that it added
an extra layer of warm cloth between one's body and the elements,
but the strict rationing of cloth during the Second
World War, the increasing popularity of pullover sweaters and
other types of heavy tops, and the increasing casualness of men's
clothing in general all contributed to its decline. In the United
States the waistcoat began declining during the 1940s when
double-breasted jackets became popular, and by the 1960s they had
become a rarity. The waistcoat remained visible in the United
Kingdom until the late 1960s. During the 1970s the waistcoat once
again became a popular and fashionable garment with many
businessmen and youngsters wearing it along with the rest of their
suits. 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: men such as Steve Dahl,
who disapproved of disco and organized a campaign to get rid of
anything associated with it, criticized waistcoats as "effeminate".
By 1983 waistcoats had become a rare sight. Today one
rarely sees a business suit worn with a waistcoat in North America,
although it remains popular among conservative-minded businessmen in the rest of
the world. Some of the last professions with de rigueur waistcoats
included banking, law, governmental agencies, and the
professoriate, which considered that a waistcoat added an element
of maturity, stability, and gravitas to its wearer. Nowadays
many regard waistcoats as stuffy and affectatious. Professional
snooker tournaments,
though, usually require that participants wear a waistcoat: in this
case without a jacket.
In Germany, the waistcoat has made a surprising
return to popularity since approximately 2000, in a country where
casual and smart casual
dress had previously come to predominate even among white-collar
workers. It has once again become a common part of business attire:
many German politicians wear waistcoats, such as Left
Party member Oskar
Lafontaine. Many commentators see this as part of a general
return to more traditional norms of dress, deportment and
working-patterns in the workplace, attributed to Germany's
sustained period of economic uncertainty.
Popular opinion once claimed that one could
identify a man as a "real gentleman" if he left the lowest button
on his waistcoat unbuttoned. This allegedly originated from the
habits of
King Edward VII while Prince of Wales: his ballooning waistline
caused him to leave the bottom button of his waistcoat undone. The
story goes that his subjects took this as a style-indicator and
started doing it themselves. Others consider the practice to derive
from the habit of undoing the lower button to stop the waistcoat
riding up when on horseback.
References
waistcoat in Danish: Vest (tøj)
waistcoat in German: Weste
waistcoat in Japanese: ウェストコート
waistcoat in Norwegian Nynorsk: Klesplagget
vest
waistcoat in Russian: Жилет
waistcoat in Slovenian:
Brezrokavnik