A moderate spread collar with a knack for standing up tall. It has two buttons under the collar points that keep your collar from flying out to the sides or falling under your suit jacket. Simply put, it’s a no-hassle collar.
In this post
Select Collar: Hidden Button. The hidden button collar is the cousin of the more well known button-down collar. As the name suggests, the buttons and buttonholes are hidden under the collar meaning you enjoy the benefits of a button-down collar while maintaining the more formal appearance of a button-less collar.
At the time, polo players were required to wear traditional collared shirts, but riding around on giant stallions during games would cause these collars to flap up, creating a visual distraction. To remedy this, players had buttons sewn onto their collars, fastening them down for matches.
By all appearances a standard point collar – except with a bit of covert functionality: it buttons down behind the tip of the collar such that the buttons are hidden. Wear this like you would the point collar: feel free to dress it up or down, with or without a tie, transitioning it from the office to after hours.
Whether you wear a tie or not, you should always button the collar of a button-down shirt. This is the one and only “rule” for wearing button-down shirts. Leaving the collar unbuttoned will not turn it into a makeshift point collar for more formal occasions. Instead, it will look messy and uninformed.
If you’ve never encountered one before, a hidden placket simply has an extra fold of fabric on top of the portion you sew the buttonholes through, essentially hiding the buttons from view. It creates a clean, minimalist look, and with our pattern you can use it on any one of the three length variations.
What is a Plackett?
The shirt placket refers to the part of your shirt where the buttonholes are placed. Located at the centre front, plackets are almost always made with more than one layer of fabric. In the past, plackets were entirely separate pieces of cloth that were sewn to the front; today, the edges are simply folded.
The button-down collar is a variant on the point-collar dress shirt and is stylistically appealing for those who want to dress down but. But, in today’s casual world, a button-down with a tie and a sport coat is still quite well dressed.
Button-down is thrown around a lot when it comes to casual shirts with buttons, but the name actually refers to the collar, not the placket. It has a button and buttonhole at the tips of the collar points. It’s generally more casual, and you can wear it with or without a tie.
It primarily comes down to a matter of formality, a button-down collar is inherently more informal and when paired with a suit and tie it offers a clashing level of formality. A standard collar dress shirt will look sharp and professional and it’s the best way to complement that suit and tie of yours.
What is a Kent collar?
Kent collar – the classic
This basic collar was named after the Duke of Kent. The medium-length, tapered spread angle of this collar and the rather close cut have a visually elongating effect. That is why this collar type is also perfect for men with round faces and shorter necks.
What is a Chelsea collar?
The CHELSEA collar is a classic collar with pointed flaps and a round shape in the back. It fits PUFF AND PENCIL dresses and blouses with a V-neck and is sewn in a ‘sandwich’ between facing and neckline. The sewing pattern is printed on A4 pages and taped together with tape or glue.
What is a Cuban collar?
Unlike the collar of an oxford shirt, a Cuban collar has almost no structure, and is designed to be worn with at least one button undone so you get maximal airflow. The style made its way stateside in the 1950s, and has been a lightweight, warm-season staple of casual dressing ever since.
Unbutton Once: The only time those collar buttons should be undone is when you’re putting on your tie. During laundering, typical wear, or hanging in the closet, keep them snapped in and locked down.
Button-down collar shirts truly shine when they’re dressed down relative to a suit. You can certainly throw one on with a pair of jeans and call it a day, but a button-down collar shirt works quite well with a sport coat and odd trouser combo too. They even pair nicely with a classic navy blazer.
No doubt you can wear your bow ties with any type of collared dress shirt. In our opinion however a semi-spread or spread collar shirt should be your go to when pairing as the collar tips will be hidden behind your neckwear.
As its name suggests, a concealed button band is a type of placket where the buttons are hidden by the top layer of the placket and are invisible when it’s buttoned up. This type of button band can be used on a variety of garments- shirts, skirts, dresses and pants.
How to Make a Hidden Button Placket
- Create the buttonhole placket. Cut the garment’s front right half; transfer all the markings.
- Accordion-fold the front extension. Fold the extension along line 3, right sides together, so that line 4 aligns with line 2; press.
- Turn the extension back in place along line 4.
What is a zip placket?
A placket is the fabric that surrounds and reinforces fasteners in a garment. In this instance, the fastener referred to in this tutorial is a zipper. STEP 1: On the wrong side of the fabric, measure and mark the placket opening where the zipper will be placed.
What is a French front placket?
The French Front is a popular placket style that features no fold back placket. It has a “cleaner” more “downtown” appeal to it. It can be slightly more difficult to iron than the standard Front placket, but works well on both business and casual shirts.
What is the difference between openings and plackets?
Openings where one side of the opening lies over the other are called plackets, which this post is about. Zippers became available about a century ago. Before that, plackets were also used for waist openings in skirts, pants and dresses. So there are many techniques.