The ruffled-front shirt was first seen in the late 50s and early 60s, but saw the height of its popularity in the late 60s and 70s. Today, it is only worn as a light-hearted reference to the excesses of 1970s fashion.
Ruffles are now back in style for 2011
A tuxedo IS the jacket. If you wear tails, wear a vest underneath, a real tie or cravat ,and cufflinks with French-cuffed shirts.
black patent leather buckle shoes, ruffled socks, full skirts and ruffled short sleeve shirts. also, a big bow and ringlets in her hair.
That depends on what you mean by a "ruffled shirt." Men - almost exclusively among the landed aristocracy - wore ruffled collars and cuffs throughout the 16th Century. A man's shirt at the time was considered an undergarment and not meant to be seen. It wasn't until the middle of the following century that men started exposing their shirt-fronts, and what was seen underneath their waistcoats was often ruffled. Well-to-do men wore ruffled shirts as a matter of course from then until the middle of the 19th Century, and with evening wear into the 20th. Over time, menswear has gotten progressively simpler, and the ruffled evening shirt was all but extinct by the end of World War I.Men's ruffled shirts enjoyed a brief revival in the 1960s and 1970s. It is all but impossible to find one today.
Only if he wants to. USually, the father does wear a tuxedo.
Men's Warehouse has dress shirts.
underware
heck no
no
Tuxedo
The correct spelling is tuxedo (formal wear, abbreviated tux)
The tuxedo is not the shirt, it is the jacket worn over the shirt. However, a shirt with French cuffs does go well with a tuxedo.
A Tuxedo.