Polo neck explained

Polo neck should not be confused with polo shirt.

A polo neck, roll-neck[1] (South Africa), turtleneck (United States, Canada), or skivvy is a garment - usually a sweater - with a close-fitting collar that folds over and covers the neck. It can also refer to the type of neckline, the style of collar itself, or be used as an adjective ("polo necked").

A simpler variant of the standard polo neck is the mock polo neck (or mock turtleneck), that resembles the polo neck with the soft fold at its top and the way it stands up around the neck, but both ends of the tube forming the collar are sewn to the neckline. This is mainly used to achieve the appearance of a polo neck where the fabric would fray, roll, or otherwise behave badly unless sewn. The mock polo neck clings to the neck smoothly, is easy to manufacture, and works well with a zip closure.

History

Europe

Turtle neck–like garments have been worn for hundreds of years, dating at least to the 15th century. They were originally designed to protect the necks of knights wearing chainmail. Royalty adopted high-neck fashion, with the height and volume of the neck ruffle indicating status.[2]

From the late 19th century on polo necks were commonly worn by fishermen, manual workers, athletes, sailors and naval officers.[3] Since the middle of that century, black polo necks have been closely associated with leftist radical academics, philosophers, artists and intellectuals.[4] [5] The polo neck jumper became an iconic symbol of the French philosopher Michel Foucault.[6] Polo necks also became a big fashion for wealthy young men after they were worn by European film stars Marcello Mastroianni and Yves Montand.[7]

Greta Garbo often wore polo necks and trousers privately, as later Audrey Hepburn would do in official photographs.

Vladimir Putin[8] of Russia, Andreas Papandreou[9] of Greece, and Emmanuel Macron[10] of France are examples of European leaders who are fond of wearing polo necks.

United States

At the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries the high neckline blouse became a fashionable option for young women as part of the emergence of the Gibson Girl.[11] Their adoption by Noël Coward in the 1920s turned polo necks into a brief middle-class fashion trend, and feminists made them into a unisex item. Absorbed into mainstream American fashion by the mid 20th century, the polo neck came to be viewed as an anti-tie, a smart form of dress for those who rejected formal wear. Senator Ted Kennedy, pianist/conductor Vladimir Ashkenazy, conductor Seiji Ozawa, philosopher Michel Foucault, shipping tycoon Stavros Niarchos, singer Barry Manilow, scientist Carl Sagan, Oracle Corporation co-founder Larry Ellison, Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes, and Apple Inc. co-founder Steve Jobs were among those often seen in polo necks.[12]

Over time it became a fad among teenage girls, especially in a lightweight form that emphasised their figures. It was not long before Hollywood was also exploiting this image as part of the sweater girl look.

By the late 1950s the "tight turtleneck" had been adopted as part of the preppy style among students, a style emphasising neatness, tidiness and grooming. This would become an important aspect of the polo neck's image in the United States.

Very elegant polo necks of silk or nylon knit, especially made with French cuffs for formal dress affairs, have also seen success in American fashion.[13]

As an alternative to the necktie

Polo necks have been used as substitutes for a shirt-and-tie since the 1920s.[14] This was sometimes frowned upon in upscale restaurants and at weddings.

John Berendt wrote in Esquire[14]

The designer Halston said[14]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chilvers . Simon . Man-trend: Roll-necks | Fashion | guardian.co.uk . Guardian . 2011-08-23 . 2013-03-14.
  2. Web site: Fashion Archives: A Look at the History of the Turtleneck . Bucci . Jessica . Fashion Fabric Sourcing . 2017-01-10 . StartUp Fashion . en-US . 2020-04-02.
  3. Web site: The Radical History & Psychology of Turtlenecks . The Good Trade . 26 November 2018 . en-US . 2020-04-02.
  4. Mary Ann Frese Witt, The Humanities and the Modern World, 2000,,, pp. 463–464.
  5. Deirdre Bair, Simone de Beauvoir: A Biography, 1990, p. 360.
  6. Book: Eribon, Didier . Michel Foucault . Didier Eribon . Betsy Wing . 1992 . 1989 . Harvard University Press . Cambridge, Mass. . 978-0-571-14474-7 . 311.
  7. Guido Vergani, Dizionario della moda, 2009, p. 348 .
  8. Zbigniew Brzezinski, Putin's Choice, 2008.
  9. Theodore C. Kariotis, The Greek Socialist Experiment: Papandreou's Greece 1981–1989, 1992
  10. Web site: What's Emmanuel Macron's Turtleneck Trying to Say?. Vanity Fair. 10 December 2019 .
  11. Web site: The Radical History & Psychology Of Turtlenecks. The Good Trade. 26 November 2018 . en-US. 2020-04-02.
  12. Web site: How the black turtleneck came to represent creative genius. Warde-Aldam. Digby. CNN. 15 October 2019 . en. 2020-04-02.
  13. Book: American Costume, 1915-1970: A Source Book for the Stage Costumer . 1989-08-22 . 0253113733 . 2013-03-14. O'Donnol . Shirley Miles . Indiana University Press .
  14. Book: Hoffmann, Frank W. . Fashion & Merchandising Fads . William G. Bailey . Haworth Popular Culture . Binghamton, N.Y. . The Haworth Press . 267–268 . 1994 . 9781560243762 . 27225478 . registration .