How to tie a tie by Savile Row Tailor Edward Sexton
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- Опубликовано: 3 май 2011
- www.edwardsexton.co.uk
Savile Row Tailor Edward Sexton (who confounded Nutters of Savile Row with Tommy Nutter) explains to Ben Fogle how to tie a tie, using a seven fold tie.
Buy Edward Sexton seven fold ties at shop.edwardsexton.co.uk/collections/ties - Хобби
I'm in my mid-forties, and have used this knot many thousands of times between school uniforms and work attire over the years, and had no idea what it was called. It was just my default knot for tying ties. The things you learn while wandering around RUclips.
I have been tying my tie like that since I first wore a tie, perfect!
he's thinking all along 'shut up Fogle you muppet'
Im getting a edward sexton suit before i die...
Sexton imparts his wisdom and expertly tweeks the beautiful tie untill it is "just so" then the first thing Fogle does is squash it flat.
This was how I made my school tie..until
I discovered the Windsor double knot
Wonderful thanks!!!!
nice knot, not sure about the tie though.
for me best 7-folds are available with either Zegna, Evoclo or a small company from Como, called Fumagalli.
This is wonderful, you know this is really great since I have been having a hard time getting my tie tied. Thanks so much, and I also recommend this Channel TheGentlemensAcademy for more how to tie a tie tips
Prefer a full Windsor.
Yeah so do I
I am surprised he used the keeper. M.
4-in-1
I think sebastian's point is made in that, Sexton, even with a cursory familiarity with British fashion (and fashion in general) is somewhat of a byword. To write, "I need an English man servant like that" misses his obvious exclusion from that classification of man servant. You may have miswrote, but the implication is plain from the comment provided. It reads as though youre ignorant of Sexton's identity, profession and stature.
Good Nice M ts 007
ts..Master. 007 U A E
I need an English man servant like that.
Teaching one's grandmother how to suck one's eggs !!!
Ben fogel is irritating
This is oft repeated, but has no basis in fact. The differences in shirt in collars means that one knot does not suit all collars. A four-in-hand looks ludicrous on a cutaway collar. Also not all ties are the same. The Windsor and half-windsor alone have grand tradition of use. Modern twerps like that idiot Crompton on his blog (which I won't promote) fails to see this.
Terrible knot.