blazer is a jacket type that resembles a suit, but is cut more casually. Blazers are generally distinguished from sports coats as more formal and customized outfits of solid color fabrics. Blazers often have marine style metal buttons to reflect their origins as a jacket worn by boating club members.
Blazer fabrics are usually durable, as they are meant as outerwear. Blazers are often part of a uniform that shows, for example, airline employees, certain school students, sports club members, or sportsmen and women on a particular team.
Video Blazer
Wearing a blazer
Blazer worn with a variety of other clothing, ranging from shirts and ties to polo shirt-necked open, or even just a plain shirt. They are visible with all-colored trousers and fabrics, from classic white cotton or linen, to gray flannels, to brown or beige cream, as well as to jeans.
The classic blue navy blazer intersected with navy buttons is a popular design and is sometimes referred to as a "reefer" blazer. Particularly in North America and the UK, it is now often used in the business of casual wear.
Blazers, in various colors, are used as part of school uniforms by many schools throughout the Commonwealth, and are still used daily for the most uniformed students in the UK, Australia and New Zealand. This is a blazer in the traditional sense: single-breasted, and often bright colors or with piping. This style is also worn by several boat clubs, such as in Cambridge or Oxford, with a piped version only used on special occasions such as a boat club dinner. In this case, the piping is in the color of the campus, and the college button is used. This traditional style can be seen in many Edwardian-era movies, such as Kind Hearts and Coronets .
Where a blazer is part of a school dress, college, sports club, or an armed services regiment association (veteran organization), it is normal for badges to be sewn into a breast pocket. In schools, these badges can vary according to the presence of pupils in school: being a member of a junior or high school, a prefect, or have been given color in recognition of certain achievements in some academic or sports field. In the Commonwealth, many regimental associations wear "regimen blazers" which also have similar badges in the breast pocket, usually in the form of a wire badge, and sometimes also regimental blazer buttons.
In the British army, officers usually do not wear badges in their jackets (or boating jackets). Two regimental blazers will be rarely the same, because they are sourced from different civilian suppliers and are not issued by any authority. This results from the fact that members of the association no longer serve personnel, but civilians, while still maintaining the ties symbolized by the badge. The default color is navy blue, though in some associations different colors are worn, such as a green gun for rifle regiment associations.
Blazers, previously used to playing or attending traditional "male sportsmen", only survive in some games now, such as occasional use by tennis players, or at cricket, where in professional matches, such as international test matches, it is considered normal for the captain to wearing a blazer with a team logo or a national emblem in a breast pocket - at least during a coin toss at the start of the game.
Two sporting events where the blazer signifies victory are the Regatta Congressional Cup at the Long Beach Yacht Club, and the Masters golf tournament, held in Augusta, Georgia. The previous event awarded a red blazer for the winners of several of the highest-caliber international race races, while the second gave green blazers to top Masters golfers in the US.
Maps Blazer
History
The term "blazer" comes from the "blazer" red from Lady Margaret Boat Club (1825), rowing club from St. Louis. John's College, Cambridge. Lady Margaret's women's jacket is called a blazer because it is a bright red cloth, and the term endures from the original red coat. A writer to London Daily News (Aug. 22, 1889) commented that "In your article today... you are talking about 'red and black striped blazer', 'the blazer', also from 'the pale toned '... Blazer is a red flannel boating jacket worn by Lady Margaret, St. John's College, Cambridge, Boat Club.When I am in Cambridge it means it and nothing else.It seems from you an article that the blazer now means a flannel jacket colored, good for cricket, tennis, boating, or beach clothes. "
This early blazer is like a sports jacket, but this term never refers to a blazer, but instead depicts a jacket that comes from innovation then wears a weird jacket for a land-based sport. The claim that the name was derived from HMS Blazer was not proved by contemporary sources, although it was reported that prior to the standardization of the uniform at the Royal Navy, the HMS Blazer crew wore a "blue and white striped jacket ", apparently in response to the HMS sailors Harlequin who apparently wore a harlequin suit. Until the end of 1837, the HMS Blazer gig crew dressed in their Captain's costume with blue and white striped jackets and from here the blazer, meaning striped jacket. , has entered the language.
The reefer jacket comes from the navy, and describes the double-breasted short jackets worn by sailors in harsh weather, when they perform such tasks as crashing into the screen. It is a descendant of what is now commonly described by the term "blazer". Originally with black horn buttons, this jacket evolved into a modern dark blazer, now single and also double breasted, and with metallic buttons.
The striped blazer became popular among English Mods in the early 1960s, and again during the late Mod's late 1970s - especially in the combination of a three-color thin line, with three single-breasted front buttons, five or six inch sides or middle ventilation , and a cuff with multiple buttons. Various photos from 1964 and 1965 show mod in London boating blazer. The Who's 1964 (as High Numbers) mod icon pictures in various ways featuring Pete Townshend, Keith Moon, and John Entwistle wearing boating boots. Other mod bands, Small Faces, and other bands favored by mods - such as The Rolling Stones, The Beatles, The Kinks, Georgie Fame and Blue Flames, The Animals, The Yardbirds, The Moody Blues and The Troggs - have band members wearing a striped blazer/boating jacket, or later, a bright color blazer with white or other wide edges. The next blazer often has a non-metallic button, sometimes in the same color as the edges. Striped striped blazer style can be seen in Quadrophenia movies. The blazer style is then bright, lovingly adopted by Austin Powers as part of its Swinging-London appearance. By the late 2000s the blazer had been adopted as a popular fashion trend among women, often having shorter lengths, rolled arms, various collars and vibrant colors.
References
External links
- Media related to Blazers on Wikimedia Commons
Source of the article : Wikipedia