Misplaced Pages

Collar pin

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Collar bar) Men's jewelry
A collar pin
Head and shoulders image of a man wearing flying goggles, a day suit, tie and collar pin.
Norman Brearley, Australian aviation pioneer of the 1920s, wearing a collar pin.

A collar pin (closely related to the collar bar and collar clip) is a piece of men's jewelry, which holds the two ends of a dress shirt collar together and passes underneath the knot of a necktie. Functioning in a similar way as a tabbed collar, it keeps the collar in place and lifts the knot to provide a more aesthetically pleasing arc to the necktie.

Types and use

A collar pin is between three and five centimeters in length and is one of three kinds:

  • a collar bar or barbell whose ends screw off and is designed to pass through specially made eyelets in each side of the collar
  • a pin, similar to a safety pin, that pierces each side of the collar (or passes through the existing eyelet)
  • a bar with clips on both ends that grasp each side of the collar

The latter two styles do not require specially made collars, but collar bars are generally not worn with buttoned-down ("polo") collars and would be redundant with tabbed collars. Collar stays are not needed when using a collar bar. As a general matter, collar pins work best with straight, minimally spread collars; least, if at all, with spread collars; and not at all with widely spread collars such as the cutaway.

References

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Collar pin" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
  1. Matthes, Betsy Durkin (2006). Dressing the Man You Love: A Woman's Guide to Purchasing, Coordinating, and Caring for His Classic Wardrobe. Peter's Pride Publishing. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-9773878-3-0.

External links

Jewellery
Forms
Making
People
Processes
Tools
Materials
Precious metals
Precious metal alloys
Base metals
Mineral gemstones
Organic gemstones
Other natural objects
Terms
Related topics
Body piercing
Fashion
Gemology
Metalworking
Phaleristics
Wearable art
Phaleristics
Auxiliary science of history and numismatics about orders, decorations, and medals
Distinctions
(Lists)
By conferee
Founts of honour*
  • States
    • and their national/public/official authorities
  • Dynasties
    • heads of currently or formerly sovereign royal families
Private
By type
Orders
Titles (Styles,
Post-nominal)
By function
Jurisdictions
  • Charter
  • Bailiwick
  • Chapter
  • Commandery
  • Obedience
  • Grand Lodge
  • Lodge
  • Others,
    by field
    Military (List)
    Civilian (List)
    Society
    Culture
    By insignia
    (Named after
    people
    )
    For wearing
    (decorations)
    Formal
    Other
    Prizes






    Ceremonies
    and events
    Related
    organisations
    Related
    concepts
    Categories: