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  1. #1
    Join Date
    9th November 08
    Posts
    33

    Fly Plaid and boutonniere?

    For a formal occasion, does one wear a boutonniere even if they have a fly plaid? I am under the impression it is not done, but my fiancee is really pushing me to wear it. When I showed her pictures of men without the boutonniere, she said "ok, you tell my aunt you aren't wearing the boutonniere she made."

    What is the standard?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    27th June 08
    Location
    NoVA by way of RI
    Posts
    463
    Quote Originally Posted by TheDev View Post
    "ok, you tell my aunt you aren't wearing the boutonniere she made."
    That'd be my gauge right there my friend.

    Sounds like it might torque off your lady and her aunt.

    Two females mad at me? No thanks.

    Good luck!
    Don't ever get yourself caught cross-ways in a ditch with them there elephant people. ~CJC

    I say we lift off and nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure ~Warrant Officer E. Ripley

  3. #3
    Join Date
    15th May 08
    Location
    Near Frederick, MD
    Posts
    622
    Sounds like no fly plaid to me.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    10th December 06
    Location
    Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    Posts
    12,125
    I tend to think that a fly plaid is just a wee bit over the top, if it were me I'd wear the boutonniere without the fly plaid.
    "If the Party could thrust its hand into the past and say this or that even, it never happened—that, surely, was more terrifying than mere torture and death."
    - George Orwell, 1984, Book 1, Chapter 3

  5. #5
    Join Date
    17th December 07
    Location
    Staunton, Va
    Posts
    4,634
    110% with McMurdo on this one. The extra 10% is because I think the fly plaid would be waaay over the top, not just a wee bit over the top.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    9th November 08
    Posts
    33
    Well, the fly plaid is for my wedding, or I wouldn't be wearing it. On this one occasion, I decided to just go for it.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    17th December 07
    Location
    Staunton, Va
    Posts
    4,634
    Well then, okay. If you are getting married all bets are off, and the rules of the well-dressed gentleman go out the window. When my friend Dickie Macmillan-Fox got married it was "Red Nose Day" and his loon of a wife-to-be wanted everyone to wear red noses. Only the last minute intervention by the C of E Vicar, who happened to be a tough as boot leather ex-Royal Marine commando, prevented my having to stand up next to Dickie wearing a red neoprene ball stuck on my nose. Well, that and the fact that Dickie bolted the morning of the wedding.

    Anyway, as we say in my part of the world,
    "Lang may yer lum reek".

  8. #8
    Join Date
    10th March 07
    Posts
    3,332
    It's perfectly possible to wear both.
    If it is your own wedding then the fly plaid is fine. You simply wear the buttonhole on the other lapel or tucked into the brooch you are fastening your fly plaid with.

    At my sister's wedding she requested that all male guests wore the plaid and buttonhhole and everyone looked just fine.


    Congratulations, by the way.

  9. #9
    arrg-isle's Avatar
    arrg-isle is offline This member has been inactive for more than 1 year
    Join Date
    22nd November 08
    Location
    Bellows Falls, Vermont
    Posts
    154
    I married off both my sons this past year (both in their 20's, neither of them kilties yet)) and I'll share with you the advice I gave both of them: remember just whose Big Day it is! In other words, go ahead and listen to everybody's urging, and ideas, and recommendations, but make sure when all is said & done, that the event goes the way that you & the bride want it to, because it's your Wedding & nobody else's!
    My old Uncle Hollis used to opine that there's only 3 kinds of people at a wedding - the Bride, the Groom, and a whole big crowd of Spectators!

  10. #10
    Join Date
    23rd August 08
    Location
    Displaced 3rd gen. Californian now residing in the State of Jefferson, USA
    Posts
    3,751
    Quote Originally Posted by arrg-isle View Post
    I married off both my sons this past year (both in their 20's, neither of them kilties yet)) and I'll share with you the advice I gave both of them: remember just whose Big Day it is! In other words, go ahead and listen to everybody's urging, and ideas, and recommendations, but make sure when all is said & done, that the event goes the way that you & the bride want it to, because it's your Wedding & nobody else's!
    My old Uncle Hollis used to opine that there's only 3 kinds of people at a wedding - the Bride, the Groom, and a whole big crowd of Spectators!
    I agree, it's your day. The only thing that matters is what you and your bride want.
    'S Rioghal Mo Dhream

    There are no noble wars,...Only noble warriors. - Anonymous

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