
I’ve been watching some of the 500-odd 15-minute Look at Life films on TV; a snapshot into the ways of life in the UK between 1959-69. In every film, most people are wearing ties – as did some of the pigs in the quarter of an hour “On the farm” insight.
When did people stop wearing ties?
At primary school, we wore ties (on elastic left over from linking my gloves together); at secondary school we wore ties which depicted which house you were in or if you were good at certain sports.
Oddly, during the late ‘60s and early ‘70s, the vogue (mainly with school ties) was to get the knot as big as your head and have nothing left to tie the tie with. It looked like a giant bat was attacking your neck – you almost expected Christoper Lee or Ingrid Pitt to be helping out in the school tuck shop.
Pupils secretly thought Roy Castle would visit and thus get them a place in the Guinness Book of Records for having the stupidest knot.
As the seventies progressed, so collars grew extraordinarily big, so your tie’s knot had to be even bigger.
My first work tie was maroon – it looked like I’d stolen it off a bishop.
There are so many variations of a tie knot. I always went for a Half Windsor – mainly because it was a move Kendo Nagasaki frequently used on a Saturday afternoon.
The only time I wear a tie these days is when I’m gardening: a knitted green one which wards off slugs.








