--------------------------------------------------------------- The following message was sent to you via AVO Web Email System: --------------------------------------------------------------- Name: http://hiendcorner.pl/?p=11688 Email Address: yuhenyk@gmail.com Subject: http://hiendcorner.pl/?p=11688 Message: Thanks for your instructions. I've been wearing a foulard myself for some time (I call it this way). I've been looking for some information about it and I found an article on Wikipedia:There is a distinction between the day cravat and highly formal dress cravat. First one is worn against the skin so it is the one you have shown. The other is worn against the collar. There is another site about these:I've got an ascot similar to yours and I wear it against the skin and the collar as well. Against the collar looks much more formal (and classy), especially with bow tie collar shirt (I don't know the exact name of such a shirt/collar in English on Wikipedia I found the name 'Cossack collar', but I bought myself a shirt of this kind with a collar that is fixed). I think there is another kind of foulard/day cravat, resembling a tie with both ends of similar/the same width (though I couldn't find the website in my bookmarks, look at the picture). I suppose that Robert Downey Jr. was wearing this kind of foulard in the restaurant while having dinner with Watson and Mary.Huntsville Alexandria Conservative http://hiendcorner.pl/?p=11688 http://hiendcorner.pl/?p=11688 ---------------------------------------------------------------- REMOTE IP ADDRESS: 127.0.0.1 USER AGENT/BROWSER: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1; Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1) ) REFERRING PAGE: http://www.avo.alaska.edu/contact.php