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Prince Michael of Kent - his shirts & ties

21K views 27 replies 22 participants last post by  UntimelyEpiphany  
#1 ·
Does this look work for him, because of his narrow face? Or do you think it does not work at all. Like Charles he prefers DBs.

Different collar style for black tie?:

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Tieless:

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#6 ·
So, that looks like a Prince Albert knot with some extra wraps, correct? I wonder how much of the tie is left after the Prince is done making that knot...
 
#14 ·
I rather like it...
 
#15 ·
I also think the knot is too large. The collar would work better with a slimmer knot. If he has a long slender neck then a high collar such as he is wearing should work better then it appears in the photo's.
I actually thought he did not look all that bad with out a tie at all.

Mychael
 
#16 ·
I really like the collar, and it may be right for him, or it may not. But clearly the large tie knot does not flatter his face. The large knot extends his chin down his chest, making his long face appear even longer. Then again, he would not be Prince Michael of Kent without that knot and beard.
 
#18 ·
+

I like it.
 
#20 ·
I don't like the facial hair, but I find him the most stylish among the royals right now.
 
#22 · (Edited)
I'm all for it -- he's unique.

When I saw his younger picture in black-tie, I immediately thought Nicholas II. I'm sure I'm not the first.
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Well, they are related. Their Majesties Czar Nicholas I & King George V are cousins and looked very much like identical twins. Prince Michael of Kent also bears the same resemblance. I guess he also tries to emulate their dress as he does their general appearance(love of DBs, full-beard, similar demeanor).
 
#25 ·
Its not the shirt collar thats the problem, he does have a long thin neck, its that the jackets aren't working with the shirts. He needs to wear one of these high collared shirts when he is being fit for a suit or jacket so they can have the jacket collar raised to cover at least half the distance and create the illusion that its normal scale in order to shorten his neck. It may also make sense that he go with narrower lapels because his face looks even thinner against wide lapels - at which point that loosely tied full Windsor has to go. Swap in a four in hand but continue with spread collars.
 
#26 ·
Its not the shirt collar thats the problem, he does have a long thin neck, its that the jackets aren't working with the shirts. He needs to wear one of these high collared shirts when he is being fit for a suit or jacket so they can have the jacket collar raised to cover at least half the distance and create the illusion that its normal scale in order to shorten his neck. It may also make sense that he go with narrower lapels because his face looks even thinner against wide lapels - at which point that loosely tied full Windsor has to go. Swap in a four in hand but continue with spread collars.
On the contrary, the wide lapels balance out his narrow face. Slim lapels are more elongating & would only accentuate his narrow face. Also, a higher collar is necessarily larger and therefore a standard* 4IH knot will look vastly disproportionate with those collars.

I do agree that raising the jacket collar could help lessen the shock of the large shirt collar, although this might be tricky.

Here is my spin on his style:

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* I can't be certain his knot is a Windsor and not a double-wrapped 4IH a la the Duke of Windsor, but either way he's doing the right thing with the size of his knot