posted
In response to the new OSC column. I would also like to give proper credit to the double windsor a fine knot indeed.
Mostly I just wanted to tell my fondness for Tommy Hillfiger ties. They always seem to tie perfectly and seem to be the perfect length.
Posts: 143 | Registered: Feb 2008
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posted
Regarding another part of the same review: I always thought "Cooky" (as used in the article) was spelled with "ie" whether it was plural or not. I know that I'm certainly more used to seeing "Cookie" rather than "Cooky". In fact, even Firefox spell-check agrees with me, as all instances of "Cooky" in this post have dotted red lines under them, indicating that they are misspelled.
Maybe it's an inside joke, and I'm just on the outside.
Posts: 636 | Registered: Apr 2002
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Either spelling is acceptable. In a case like that, you get to pick which one you like best. OSC likes "cooky".
cook·ie also cook·y (kk) n. pl. cook·ies 1. A small, usually flat and crisp cake made from sweetened dough. 2. Slang A person, usually of a specified kind: a lawyer who was a tough cookie. 3. Computer Science A collection of information, usually including a username and the current date and time, stored on the local computer of a person using the World Wide Web, used chiefly by websites to identify users who have previously registered or visited the site.
posted
I have a rather large collection of ties (over 200) but being a teacher I wear them 4-5 days a week. I have found I really like wildties.com It has a great selection of fun ties as well as your going to church ties!
Posts: 176 | Registered: Jun 2008
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posted
It's somewhat regional as to what preference is developed, too.
Oh, and I get irritated by my husband's sloppy lopsided fore-in-hand knots on the lightweight ties he often wears. I tie his ties in a full Windsor (or now and then if they're really short, a half Windsor), take them off knotted, and hang them up that way so he can go to work or church with a properly knotted tie!
And then instead of taking it off carefully to preserve the knot he yanks it off and leaves it all twisted.
Grrr. I love that man but I wish I could teach him to knot a tie properly. (I've been trying for about five years now.)
Posts: 21182 | Registered: Sep 2004
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posted
When it twists up and tilts to one side because of your untidy knot and makes you look unkempt when it is supposed to make you look professional or fancy, that is not the right way to wear it.
Posts: 21182 | Registered: Sep 2004
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(I learned to tie ties in AFJROTC. There was one cadet in our flight who could NOT tie his tie. He was always getting uniform violations as it was and we felt sorry for him doing laps and pushups and having to salute the wall. So since the other guys couldn't seem to figure out how to tie another guy's tie for him, several of us girls learned how.)
Posts: 21182 | Registered: Sep 2004
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A man called in on a radio show once saying his dad always tied his tie. The had to be laying on the table for his dad to tie it though. His father was a funeral director and could only tie someone else's tie in that position. Poor kid!
Posts: 204 | Registered: Aug 2001
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posted
The only time I had to wear a tie was for school uniform when I was five years old. I was into sparkly princess-fairy dresses at the time, so I loathed the whole idea of wearing it.
After the first twenty attempts to teach me how to tie it, my mother dramatically chopped the tie in half... and then (to my great disappointment) stitched a velcro fastener to it. I moved schools before I grew out of that tiny tie and so tragically never did learn.
Posts: 1528 | Registered: Nov 2004
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KQ Check out the "Bear" Cub Scout book. It has instructions for tying a tie that even a nine year old can understand. Perhaps KPC just needs to be recycled a little through Cub Scouts.
Posts: 1167 | Registered: Oct 2005
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