Evening gown
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
An evening gown or gown is the general name given to a lady's dress worn to a formal affair.
It corresponds to men's formal wear for white tie and black tie events. Gowns are worn by members of a wedding party, by guests at formal evening weddings, for diplomatic events such as state dinners, and other formal events including debutante cotillions, proms, charity balls, art premiers, the opening of opera and ballet seasons, and many award ceremonies.
- For a brief history of the gown, see Clothing terminology.
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A gown is a long, often loose, flowing garment. It is a type of dress, ranging in length from tea and ballerina to full-length. Gowns are often made of a luxury fabric such as chiffon, velvet, satin, or silk.
For their debuts, debutantes wear long white ball gowns. They also wear long white leather gloves that go well above the elbow and that close with small pearl buttons at the wrist. Their jewelry is understated and suitable for a young lady about to be formally presented to society for the first time.
According to rules of etiquette and attire, ladies must wear a ball gown to events where men are required to wear white tie attire.
The elements of ladies' white tie attire could include:
- ball gown - always full-length for any white tie occasion
- dancing shoes - formal pumps, evening sandals or ballet slippers
- jewelry - earrings and necklace; rings and bracelets are optional. A watch is not considered appropriate except for jewelled versions whose faces are covered so that they resemble bracelets.
- gloves - if worn, should be opera length
- stole, cape or cloak, or an opera coat
- handbag - clutch style or small evening bag
Optional:
- state decorations - if specified on invitation; worn on a bow pinned to the chest
- tiara - if "state decoration" is specified; worn by married women only
A gown for a black tie event may be full length, ballet, or tea (mid-calf to ankle) length. In general, the same rules as a white-tie event apply to a black-tie event, though in some cases a cocktail gown may be acceptable.
To accompany a gentleman wearing a formal kilt, a lady wears a white gown with a tartan sash. A less formal variant is a longer kilted skirt with jacket. The sash or kilted skirt may be the tartan of the woman's own clan (if she is entitled to wear one), of her husband's clan, or any of the "district tartans" approved for general wear.
- In the 1940s, couturiers introduced "dancing costumes", a party dress with a full skirt specifically made for semi-formal and formal dances. The dancing costume was shorter than the evening gown.
- A "ball skirt" is a variant fashion which resurfaced in the 1990s, consisting of a full, long skirt that can be worn with a cashmere sweater, lace camisole, or other dressy top.
In the United States it is increasingly common for people to wear evening attire beginning at 4 p.m., although this used to be the subject of derision.[citation needed] In more sophisticated circles it still is not done.
- ball gown
- cocktail dress
- wedding gown
- black tie
- evening dress (white tie)