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21st November 13, 03:47 PM
#11
For me, it's a half Windsor, and a Shelby for shorter ties. At least on me, a full Windsor just seems too bulky. However, I'm going to have to try that Eldridge. It has a real flair to it.
" Anything worth doing is worth doing slowly." - Mae West -
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21st November 13, 04:18 PM
#12
I like the full windsor. I agree the half looks asymmetrical.
KEN CORMACK
Clan Buchanan
U.S. Coast Guard, Retired
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, USA
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21st November 13, 04:22 PM
#13
Windsor knot for me, I like it's symmetry. I also think that Eldridge is interesting.
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21st November 13, 05:33 PM
#14
http://www.tcm.phy.cam.ac.uk/~tmf20/tieknots.shtml
Recently I've started using the Christensen as a change-up from the Windsor.
"Once you can accept the universe as matter expanding into nothing that is something, wearing stripes with plaid comes easy." - Albert Einstein
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21st November 13, 06:27 PM
#15
 Originally Posted by unixken
I like the full windsor. I agree the half looks asymmetrical.
As a Buchanan, I would think you'd be quite used to that.
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21st November 13, 07:13 PM
#16
The Windsor is too big a knot for my tastes. I learned to tie a left-hander's variation on the half-Windsor, which I use each morning on my business ties.
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21st November 13, 10:05 PM
#17
Windsor, 4-in-hand, and Onassis knots for me mostly.
The Official [BREN]
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21st November 13, 10:58 PM
#18
 Originally Posted by HippieLee
I grew up thinking there was only one knot and didn't know what it was called but I could tie it like a pro from about the age of 11 on. It was only fairly recently I discovered there is a whole world of tie knots and one I plan to try soon is the Eldridge:
Attachment 15485 I think that sucker just looks cool. I'm not sure if it requires a longer tie though - I'll have to experiment.
I also plan to start using bow ties on some occasions so I look forward to that.
I have a bad habit of thinking the ideas I learned in my youth are the only right way to do things and I've been trying to break myself of such narrow-mindedness. I think I'd have to see this skinny end tie configuration as I've never heard of it. Then I'd have to examine myself and work out if I don't like it because it looks funny to me or if it looks funny because I'm being narrow (end of the tie) minded again.
That's a cool looking knot . However , you may have to take an origami class in order to master it .
Mike Montgomery
Clan Montgomery Society , International
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22nd November 13, 01:52 AM
#19
As a schoolboy I started out with the four-in-hand, but when I was about 10 my father taught me the Windsor and half-Windsor. I now use the half-Windsor as it seems to come out symmetrical for me, and the Windsor is a bit too bulky. I may try some of the others in this thread, I never knew there were so many ways. I like the Eldridge, though I suspect it only really works with plain ties.
If I'm wearing a bow tie, I always tie it myself and would never wear a clip-on.
For all this discussion of ties, I only own three. A black bow tie, a black neck tie for funerals, and a university neck tie for everything else.
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22nd November 13, 07:01 AM
#20
In general I let the style of the collar and the thickness of the tie material determine the type of knot. But most often I wear a bow tie and I only know one way to the bow.
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