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Senin, 09 Juli 2018

Pilots in Mess Dress
src: rmhistorical.com

Mess Dress is a military term for a semi-formal evening dress worn by military officers in the mess or on other official occasions. This is also known as mess uniform and, more informally, as a mess kit . Often consisting of disheveled jackets and trousers worn with formal shirts and other formal accessories, although the exact form varies depending on the uniform rules for each service.

Before World War II the style of military clothing was largely confined to Britain, the United Kingdom and the United States armed forces; although French, German Empire, Swedish and other navies have adopted their own version of cluttered clothing during the late nineteenth century, influenced by the Royal Navy.

At this time clothing is also sometimes worn by members of civil uniformed services and members of the Royal Household. While most uniforms are worn by officers assigned to whom it is mandatory, it can also be used as an optional uniform by senior enlisted personnel in the US Navy and US Air Force, US Marine Corps Non-Commissioner Non-Commissioner Staff, and by non-commissioners in the Force British Land and Royal Air Force.

Video Mess dress



Australia

Media related to the Mess of Australia uniform on Wikimedia Commons

The Australian Army has separate boxes for summer and winter. The package of summer chaos is a white jacket, almost identical between different army branches. The winter kit is made of thicker material, with a colored jacket (red or dark blue) of the user corps. The winter dress includes a vest. Both kits have the same blue barrathea pants, but the trousers vary in color and the width of the foot line indicating the corps. Women's clothing is the same mess, except that women wear skirts, not pants. Both versions are worn with a bow tie and a white shirt; Marcella for winter and plains for the summer.

The Australian Air Force has a different uniform for summer and winter. The summer mess package is marked with a white jacket while a dark blue winter jacket.

Maps Mess dress



Canada

Media related to Messian's uniform from Canada on Wikimedia Commons

The messy dress is worn as a formal evening outfit for a messy dinner. Uniforms ranging from clutter-filled dresses (with dinner jackets, belts or vests) to clothing suits worn with bow ties for individuals who do not need to have dirty clothes (usually non-commission members or reserve members). Mess dresses are not provided at public expense. However, all officers assigned from regular forces are required to have cluttered clothing within six months of being commissioned.

The winter dress (No. 2) for the Royal Canadian Navy consists of a deep blue jacket with a rope-lined badge worn on the sleeves, blue navy blue pants worn by all assigned officers (unlike in the Royal Navy they are not limited to captains and officers flag) white shirt with soft collar or wings and white vest. The officers of the Captain (N) rank and above wear a tail suit instead of a standard jacket. The NCMs pants are the same pattern, but without the golden lace under the seams. Miniature medals obtained are worn on the left collar; the usual size qualified badges earned were worn on the left arm, above the rank of the badge (as they were used in the Royal Navy for naval aviators). The summer dress (No. 2A) is similar except that a white jacket with a rank badge on the blue shoulder board (gold covered for flag clerk) is worn, and either a vest or cumberbund is worn.

The standard winter pattern pattern (No. 2) for the Canadian Army consists of a red jacket with a rank badge worn on a soft shoulder loop, dark blue pants (almost black), white pants with a soft collar or wings and a dark blue vest. The details of regimen differences vary according to the regiment and are defined in detail in the Canadian Forces Clothes Instruction. Miniature medals are worn on the left chest under the miniature of the earned qualifying badge. The standard summer pattern clutter dress is similar except that a white jacket with a rank badge worn on a black shoulder board, and a belt, worn. Army reserve regiments are authorized to wear typical messy clothes for regiments and which can consist of jackets with different pieces (eg high collars) and colors, rather than the standard pattern of cluttered clothing. The official summer dress (No. 2A), which consists of a white jacket as a red substitute, varies from regiment to regiment, but is usually not allowed for NCM under the Guarantor's rank.

The winter dress from the Royal Canadian Air Force consists of a midnight blue jacket with a gold rating badge worn on the sleeves, black midnight pants, white shirt with soft collar, and a belt in the colors of the Royal Canadian Air Force. tartan. The miniature medal is worn on the left breast over the miniature of the qualified badge earned. The summer dress (No. 2A) is similar except that a white jacket with a badge worn on the midnight shoulder boards is charged, and is authorized as an optional order for RCAF officers only.

No. 2B is authorized as an alternative to officers who have not bought uniform mess, and for all NCMs because they are not required to buy messy uniforms. This applies to all three elements and consists of the appropriate standard service uniforms for elements (green rifles for the Army, navy blue for RCN and light blue for RCAF), long-sleeved white shirts (such as those issued to naval personnel)) and bow ties - black cousin. Uninstalling ribbon and nametag worn.

No. 2C is a casual and simple board uniform order, worn by members of all elements while dining formally on HMC ships at sea. It consists of a short-sleeved shirt service and clothing pants that match the elements, belts in black or official regimental colors. Name tag, medal/ribbon not charged.

No. 2D is a standard CF dressing pattern, now replaced, which is allowed to be used prior to return to separate environmental uniforms for the Army, Navy and Air Force. It is identical with the no. 2 Air Force except that buttons and other fixtures reflect the common unified CF uniform from 1968 to about 1987. It is permitted to be used by personnel who have joined the "" and obtained their uniform uniform "before re-forming a distinctive environmental uniform.

Military Style Wedding with Mess Dress uniform - YouTube
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German

Media related to German Mess's uniform on Wikimedia Commons

The mess uniforms were worn by the German Imperial Navy officers, though not by army officers. During the 1930s in Nazi Germany, officers from Schutzstaffel (SS) had the option of purchasing a uniform uniform. SS sosekan dresses resemble a double-breasted dinner jacket, with a collar tab and white piping.

In modern Germany, cluttered clothing is the uniform allowed for officers and non-commissioner officers (NCO) of the Bundeswehr attending white or black-denominated social events. The female warrior wore a long dark blue skirt and a white blouse with the Bundesadler coat ("Federal Eagles") in the right collar. It is combined with a long scarf on the chest and a short dark blue velvet jacket. Variants with short white silk jackets combined with blue blouses are also permitted. Wallets and other accessories can be carried.

The basic clutter gown ( Grundform ) for men consists of a jacket with chain closures, long black silk slim strips, and either a belt (army, air force, navy) or Torerobund (torero style waistband, for army and air force). This belt or belt is a black cloth for the army and dark blue for the air force and navy. The chain is gold for the navy and for army and air generals; others wear silver chains. It fits into a white shirt (with a hidden skirt, no stand-up collars, ruffles, or embroidery) and a black butterfly tie and black or black patent leather shoes.

As a variation, a black smoked jacket with black silk collar and covered black silk (Army, Air Force) can be worn instead. The ranks are embroidered into epaulettes. The jacket is worn without cuff title, collar cover, or other colored emblem. In the navy, the rank of the badge is placed in the arm. Specialist activities, proficiency, or badges are often included in embroidered portions. Miniature versions of each order and decorations are worn from the ribbon.

Mess dress Wikipedia - e-pic.info
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Greek

The Hellenic Armed Forces chaos dress, adopted in 1953, resembles a "rolled collar" jacket, vest and trousers of the British army as described in this article. This is classified as not. 4 shirts. Color is a uniform full of historic uniforms of a particular branch or service (eg moderate green with crimson facings for armored cavalry officers, dark blue with red facing for infantrymen). Official white version for summer wear.

Military uniforms | Page 11 | Ask Andy FORUMS
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Israel

In accordance with the doctrine of the Israeli Defense Forces on the People's Army, the uniforms of chaos are not imposed inside Israel. It takes the form of khaki service uniform rather than the special evening dress worn by many other countries. Only used overseas, either by military attaches or by senior officers on official state visits. These rules also apply to IDF dress uniforms. Due to the small number of uniforms required they are bespoke adjusted for certain officers. Uniform mess is the only order of Israeli armor that includes a tie, and has a version of summer and winter.

Air Force Mess Dress Wedding #4 Air Force Mess Dress Jacket ...
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Jamaica

Both non-commissioned senior officers and officers assigned from the Jamaican Defense Force can wear (No. 5 Dress) gross equipment.


New Zealand

The Royal New Zealand Navy, the New Zealand Army and the New Zealand Air Force have uniforms in disarray in a style similar to those worn by equivalent British and Australian services.

New Zealand Army uniform uniforms passed for officers have recently been simplified because the corps and color of the previously used regiments have been replaced by universal red and blue patterns with only a symbol to distinguish one branch or unit from another.

New Zealand Royal Air Force mess mess mess consists of a gray/blue jacket, trousers and a vest with a white shirt and a black bow tie. Any medals are displayed above the left breast pocket. The colors of individual flying squadrons appear on the dress belt belt worn by officers. Senior NCO (sergeant, flight sergeant, and warrant officer) also wears clothing for various special functions.


Norway

Media related to Norwegian Mess's uniforms on Wikimedia Commons

The Norwegian Army has no special uniform, but uses the appropriate parade or service uniform.

Royal Norwegian Navy uses a dark blue hooded jacket and vest. Like at Royal Norwegian Air Force, the mess jacket is used with a white vest for a gala event.


Pakistan

In Pakistan Armed Forces, messy uniforms can be worn for official/official evening events, eg. disrupt dinner/night guests. Pakistani Army's mess suits may be in khaki drills or green guns, and most resemble the British Army's no. 1 dresses rather than the special evening dresses described in the English section of this article. Mess Uniforms are authorized for all officers assigned from Pakistan Army, Air Force and Navy. This uniform order is mandatory for military officers stationed abroad, whether as a Military Attache (Air Attache, Naval Attache, Defense Attache) or by a high-ranking officer on an official state visit. All military officers are required to wear clothing on a suitable occasion during the visit or while attending the state inauguration. All uniforms are messy bespoke adjusted to certain officers according to their regiment/corps, duties and rank.


Swedish

Media related to Swedish Mess's uniforms on Wikimedia Commons

The "lower" ( liten ) and "full" ( stor ) clutter gowns are two uniforms of the Swedish Army uniforms of the "social uniform" subgroup ( sÃÆ'Â ¤llskapsuniformer ). Apart from cluttered clothing, this group also includes "formal wear" and "clothing society".

Clothes full of clutter ( stor mÃÆ'¤ssdrÃÆ'¤kt )

Swedish-style dress is a formal dress to wear at times when a civilian wears a white tie or a tail suit. Swedish Army Code for dress full of chaos is m/86, navy is m/1878, and air force m/1938. The numbers represent the year in which the force was introduced. A complete messy dress is equivalent to Dress Uniform.

The uniforms consist of:

  • dark blue jacket
  • white vest; sash of white waist for female personnel
  • dark blue pants with piping; dark blue long skirt for female personnel
  • clothes coat; female personnel wearing white-collared front blouses spread wide,
  • black butterfly tie
  • dark blue hat (with certain variations between branches)
  • black socks
  • plain-black legs, lace-up shoes (patent leather is an option); female personnel wearing black ladies shoes (again with variations)
  • White
  • gloves

Additional clothing includes robes (similar to a boat coat), galoshes, and scarves, as well as any medal. With a dress full of clutter one can also wear braces or a vest in one's branch color.

Lesser mess dress ( liten mÃÆ'¤ssdrÃÆ'¤kt )

The Swedish lesser mess dress is equivalent to a civilian black tie. This is the same as the English messing blessing or American messaging blues .

It's different from dress clutter in several ways:

  • vest/waist sheets are dark blue; white is allowed if the meeting includes civilians
  • no plumbing in pants
  • Black
  • gloves
  • Short skirts allowed, combined with chocolate nylon stockings
  • acceptable turnover collars

Army officers and cadets can replace blue vest and sling or cloak with a traditional regiment or branch color. A saber can be done, but not mandatory.

  • Dark red - Artillery and Paratrooper
  • Black - Engineering troops
  • Yellow - Infantry and infantry troops
  • Royal blue - Cavalry and Life Guards
  • Bright red - Anti-airplane
  • Black with yellow piping - Armored Troop
  • Green - Signal Force
  • Light blue - Logistics Force

Mess dresses are permitted uniforms, as it is permissible to wear on certain occasions, but ownership is not mandatory. There is always a mandatory uniform form that can be used as an alternative (army: m/87 A, navy: m/48, air force: m/87). The chaotic dress thus fits with the hÃÆ'¶gtidsdrÃÆ'¤kt (formal dress) and the lesser clutter dress by sÃÆ'¤llskapsdrÃÆ'¤kt (clothing community). The formal attire is the same as the parade gown, when worn on an equivalent white tie show. "People wear" is a uniform service uniform, when worn for a black tie event. Formal clothing and societies (not cluttered clothing) are the kind of mandatory uniform for any military event, funeral, parade, state visit, or any other non-festive occasion.


United Kingdom

Media related to the Mess uniform of the United Kingdom on Wikimedia Commons

Royal Household

Officers from several ceremonial military corps, such as Yeomen Guards and Gentlemen in Weapons, were authorized to wear the Royal House court uniforms as messy clothing.

Royal Navy

The Royal Navy and several other navies distinguish between messy clothing, which is now the equivalent of a white tie, and cluttered clothing, equivalent to a black tie.

Before 1939, there were three forms of evening dress:

  • Ball dress (No. 2) - undress tailcoat, gold epaulettes, gold-waisted trousers, white vest, black butterfly tie, waist cap
  • The messy shirts (No. 7) - messy jackets, gold straps, blue vest, black butterfly tie, hat
  • Mess removes (No. 8) - messy jacket, plain trousers, blue vest, black butterfly tie, hat

Today, there are only two forms of evening dresses:

  • Shirt mess (No. 2A) - messy jacket, plain trousers, white vest, black bow tie
  • Mess undress (No. 2B) - messy jacket, plain pants, blue vest or belt, black bow tie

Officials of the rank of captain and above wear gold-strapped pants (gold lace stripes dubbed "lightning conductors"), and can wear undressed jackets (without epaulettes), with messy clothing or messy messresses. Tailcoat undress is so named to distinguish it from full dress tailcoats worn during the day in full clothing (No. 1), used in modified form by today's admirals as ceremonial attire. The long-necked jacket and the messy jacket are double-breasted, with upturned collar and six gold buttons, but cut to be worn single-breasted and tightened on the front with two connected gold buttons. This long-necked coat is equipped with a porous hip pocket with three gold buttons in each pocket. The rank is indicated on a long-necked jacket and a messy jacket with golden lace on the sleeve. When the tropical rig is ordered, a white jacket is worn instead of blue, with a shoulder board to show the rank.

The messy dress and the undress mess are currently worn with a soft marcella-coated shirt with a soft collar. Rigid marcella-lined t-shirts and rigid wing collars were previously worn with all forms of evening gowns, but wiped out first to undress, and finally in the mid-1990s for messy clothing. Rear admirals and above can continue to wear rigid shirts and collars with messy dresses. Cummerbunds, which can be worn with cluttered clothing, instead of blue vests and with Red Sea Sea rigs (No. 2C), are often decorated with badges or colors appropriate for the vessel or the place where the attendant serves. For example, HMS Glasgow - Tartan Black Watch; HMS Illustrious - green with ship logo (three crossed trumpets) with gold; Royal Naval Engineering College (RNEC) - engineers' purple with the letter RNEC in gold. Traditionally, half Wellington shoes are worn with messy and messy dresses undressed, but today's shoes are more common. The optional outfit worn with evening gowns is a robes cape, which is a knee-length navy blue cape lined with white silk, with four gold buttons, and tied around the neck with two golden lion heads joined the chain. Miniature medallions are worn with messy clothes and mess undress, although beforehand the medallions were only used with irregular clothing on regular occasions, such as by the day's attendants. Officers who belong to the chivalrous order wear their stars and ribbons as they should.

The Elder Brethren at Trinity House are authorized to wear cluttered clothing based on a Royal Navy captain.

British Army

The uniform first appeared in the British Army around 1845, initially using a short "shell jacket" worn since 1831. This work jacket was worn open on a regimental regiment vest for evening dress. The initial objective was to provide a relatively convenient and inexpensive alternative to the elaborate, intricate and elaborate uniforms that were then worn by officers for night social events such as dinners or balls. With the loss of clothing uniforms in general after World War I, the cluttered clothing became the most colorful and traditional uniform that most officers in the British and Commonwealth army had to retain. Immediately after World War II, the cheaper "blue patrol" was worn for several years as cluttered clothing, but in 1956 the traditional uniform had been reread.

The formal appointment of the most commonly used mess uniform in the British Army is "No. 10 (Temperate) Mess Dress". The shape varies according to the regiment or corps, but generally a short jacket is worn, which either ties the neck (cut to show the vest, this is traditionally the style worn by cavalry regiments and other mounted corps), or worn with a white shirt and bow tie black (traditionally an ordinary style for regiments, corps, and unparalleled services). Since the regiment amalgamation, the "cut away" jacket or cavalry style has been adopted by some British Army infantry regiments such as the Royal Regiment of Wales, Fusiliers Kingdom Regiment, and corps such as the General Aide Corps and Royal Logistics Corps. Foot Guard Officers, Royal Engineers, Parachute Regiments, Royal Army Medical Corps, and the Royal Regiment of Scotland among others still wear infantry-style jackets.

The colors of the jackets and the messy trousers reflect the regimental uniforms of the regimental regiments in question, as they are worn until at least 1914. Jackets, therefore, are usually red, dark blue or green rifle, with collars, cuffs, vests, or lapels in the colors previously faced by questionable regiments. In the case of smelted regiments, the characteristics of the previous uniform are often combined. Vests are often embroidered with great luxury, though with modern modifications, such as the cotton core for gold cording, are not the thick gold ropes that made these items very expensive before World War II. Dress mess non-commissioned officers are usually simpler in design, but in the same color as their regimental officers.

Most of the British army regimens combine high-waist trousers and very tight, known as overalls, the bottom of the buckle under Wellington or George leather shoe. Ornamental spurs are usually used by traditionally installed cavalry and corps regiments; some regiments and other corps prescribe spurs for field officers, because in the past these officers will be locked up. The Rifles do not wear spurs in any rank, following the tradition of the Light Infantry because historically there is no Light Infantry officer on horseback. The Scottish regiment wore kilts or tartan trews, and some wore tartan vests as well.

In "No 11 Warm Weather Mess Dress", a long white hip-bor jacket is worn either with a vest in the same material or belt pattern regiment. Blue and various shades of red or green are the most common colors for belts. Trousers or overalls the same as No dress. 10.

Women officers and soldiers wore disheveled jackets in a pattern similar to their male counterparts over a long dark-leg nightgown. Black handbags can be carried, and black night shoes worn.

Royal Air Force

No dress. 5 Mess at the Royal Air Force is the same as the one in the Royal Navy, except that the jackets and pants are blue. For the most formal white tie events, such as state dinners, court balls and evening receptions, a white bow tie is worn with a white vest (No. 5A). For all other evening events, a black butterfly bow tie with a blue blue vest (No. 5B) or gray gray belt (No. 5) is worn. Cummerbunds from a squadron or a particular unit design can also be used. Among Scottish-based units, a gray tartan gray Clan Douglas was originally official, but the official RAF tartan that has just been approved is now official. Tartan, designed in 1988, was officially recognized by the Department of Defense in 2001. Variations of No. 1 Service Dress (SD) is also permitted; a regular blue shirt and a black tie replaced with a white shirt and a black bow tie. This dress is called No Mess Dress No. 4.

For women, today's messy dress consisted of a high-necked gray-striped single-breasted jacket and a white marcella shirt as a man, a small bow tie and belt, and a long, azure-length gray blue skirt, worn with patent- leather shoes and tight pants or black stockings. Unlike a men's jacket jacket, which has a pointed collar, a women's jacket has a shawl collar. From the 1970s and before the introduction of today's women's clutter dress in 1996, female officers wore blue royal dress dresses made of crimplene material with loose mandarin neck, long sleeves, and long ankle hems. The rank is indicated on a small enamel brooch worn near the neck.

British Police

Police officers may wear clothing for formal dinners if appropriate, but are usually worn by officers who have reached the rank of Inspector or higher. The Metropolitan Metropolitan Police clutter dress is dark blue with black cufflinks and black 'roll' collars with embroidered badges (Brunswick stars) in each collar. That's from the Commissioner including two-inch oak leaf lace strips on pants and a set of aiguillettes. Matched black vest is worn and a badge is displayed on the epaulettes.


United States

Media related to the Mess Messenger of the United States in Wikimedia Commons

The use of messy dresses in US Service Uniforms is a newer trend, which began in the early 20th century.

AS. Army

In 1902, when the US Army adopted its latest blue-collar uniform for a complete outfit, a modified form of civil tail coat was also introduced for evening dress, worn with white ties and vests. This is known as a special uniform for evening wear. At the same time, a messy uniform that resembles the English pattern is permitted for less formal evening events. The short jacket is dark blue or white, according to the climate. After 1911 the blue jacket included collar colored branches (yellow for cavalry, red for artillery, light blue for infantry, and so on). Individual officers can wear complete clothing or one of the alternative evening dresses for social functions. Considering the costs involved, it is usually senior officers who appear in a uniform or evening uniform. While a full blue dress was worn from 1902 to 1917 by all ranks for a parade ceremony in the United States, two optional night uniforms were only allowed for officers.

Blue uniforms were no longer used after 1917. However, a white uniform for assigned officers and warrants was ratified again in 1921. In 1928, wearing a variety of blue shirt uniforms was authorized for all ranks, but only when tasked, and at the expense of individual. In practice, this means that only uniform pre-1917 uniforms, and to a lesser extent wearing a special night, reappears in significant amounts.


After World War II, evening outfits and uniforms were reintroduced, with the tail mantle having an Austrian knot (trefoil) above the service-branch color (the general officer had a star on the oak braid), with the rank placed at the bottom of the knot opening. The messy jacket, meant for black tie events, uses an Austrian knot rating system with the branch symbol on the bottom. Number of vertices indicates officer rank: five for colonel, four for lieutenant colonel, three for major, two for captain, one for lieutenant one, and none for second lieutenant. This elaborate system was replaced by the style of the night coat (which lost its "tail" in the late 1960s) in 1972, using a single node and a rank placed above the service-branch color. A white jacket for summer clothes was introduced in the 1950s.

A special evening dress or tail coat finally vanished in 1975, replaced by a blue Army uniform, which in its modern form is similar to 1911. It is common for the soldiers to wear suspenders in the color of their branches with troop uniforms, even though they hidden under the mantle.

Miniature medals suspended on the bands one and a half wide of their normal counterparts, and worn on the left collar. Exceptions to the miniature medal are the Medal of Honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom (though the PMF also includes an optional miniature version), and authorize foreign neck ornaments (eg, Commander of the Order of the Bath Order, Commander of the Merit Military Order, et al. ) Individual awards and units consisting of ribbons alone are not imposed on uniforms that fall apart. Miniature versions of combat and special skill badges are worn over the miniature medallion, along with miniature versions of the Ranger's shoulder tab and Special Forces, made of enamelled metal. Shooting skills and driver/mechanic badges are not worn on uniforms that fall apart. Regression typical emblem worn on the right collar. Identification marks imposed on service uniform pockets, such as Sergeant Identification Badge, Presidential Service Badge, Recruitment Badge, Head Office of Identity Identity of Chief of Staff, et al. , worn between the top and the middle button on the applicable side of the messy uniform.

Clothes uniform enlisted uniforms are dark blue, rather than using branch colors. The registered rank emblem is worn on the arm in the same manner as in a service uniform tunic. Below, in both arms, there are long service lines instead of the short lines used on the service uniform. The same service lines were again worn on both sleeves of blue-uniform tunic dresses until blue uniform dresses were reconfigured to become uniforms of the Army service and replace the green service uniform.

AS. Air Force

In the 1950s and 1960s, the US Air Force's official uniforms consisted of a civilian black suit with extra military arms and a rank badge. Can be used as a black tie or a combination of white tie. Because of its tail, it is not considered uniform.

The original US Air Force mess mess consisted of a short black jacket with black trousers, with a white jacket for summer clothes. The jacket has a satin collar with a matching satin arm. It began operating in the 1960s and was removed in the 1980s. Sometimes still used by retired officers. The current messy dress is similar in cutting and sewing, but in a dark blue to wear throughout the year.

The current pattern was introduced in 1981 and is also similar to the design of the Royal Air Force, except that the coat and trousers are dark blue. Dark blue ties and dark blue belts are used for black tie affairs, and a white butterfly tie with white vest for white tie affair. Silver-tipped shoulder boards and silver sleeves are worn instead of braids (enlisted members wearing the arm's shoulders instead of shoulder boards, and no silver sleeves), along with silver buttons. No hats are worn. Public officials have strong silver shoulder boards and wider silver armrests. The enlisted members also have the option of wearing a semi-formal uniform, basically a service outfit issued with a white shirt replaced for a blue shirt, but many non-commissioning officers choose to buy a messy dress. Women's uniform uniforms have long skirts that replace long pants and remove button chain clips for coats.

AS. Marine Corps

United States Marine Corps uniform uniforms come from the late 19th century. The Mess's uniform style at the USMC is reserved for officers, and unarmed staff (SNCOs) grade E6 and up (sergeant staff for master sergeant/sergeant cannon master); junior enlisted members wore blues clothing or Service "A" (also known as "Alphas") as their most formal uniform.

The uniform coat of officers and officers is guaranteed to be tied around the neck, similar to the blue uniform, but cut, "cavalry style", to expose the white shirt and red red belt (common attendant has red vest with small golden knob). This version is known as the "B" evening dress, and is equivalent to a formal "black tie". It is used for formal dances, balls, dinners, and events like the annual USMC Birthday Ball. Officers (all ranks) may wear, in lieu of a pink belt or vest, a white vest for a white tie event (known as a "A" uniform evening gown, and the equivalent of a "white tie" of civilian clothes for most official occasions such as State Dinner or Presidential Inauguration).

The rank of officer, in gold or silver wire, is embroidered directly on the shoulders of his shoulders, bordered by gold wire and red piping. Collars and handcuffs are also limited by gold wire and red cloth, with quatrefoil pads for the warrant officers and company-class officers, one row of oak leaves for the field officer, and two rows of oak leaves for the general clerk. The uniform is equipped with a pair of middle blue trousers with gold and red stripes, with an optional boat robes of a dark blue broadcloth cloth coated with red wool (for male officers and SNCOs) or an optional dress gown from tropical wool blue polyester material that coated with red satin rayon cloth (for female officers and SNCOs).

Unarmed staff uniforms wearing a double night dress similar to a naval officer, with high waist trousers with bloodline, red belt, and black bow tie. The jacket is cut so that there is no overlap, but with the sides clasped together. Chevrons class in the 1890s style, larger than other registered USMC class chinnrons, worn on each jacket sleeve. A white cummerbund with a white butterfly tie is authorized (for a white tie show) for SNCO.

The white summer mess of chaos (see link for obsolete uniforms), similar to the design for the US Navy and the US Coast Guard uniform, but with shoulder epaulettes instead of the leaderboard, was worn until the mid-1990s when it was removed.

U.S. Navy, Coast Guard, Merchant Marine, and others

US Navy officers and top officials, US Coast Guard, United States Public Health Agency Assigned the Corps, NOAA Corps, and Merchant Marine using the same uniform, called "dinner dresses". There are three styles of this uniform - dinner dresses, dinner jackets, and tropical dinner clothes.

Dinner, blue and white dinner uniforms are a modification of a blue uniform or white clothing service, with service ribbons and chest coat replaced with miniature medals and miniature breast emblems. In addition, the police and head officers wore night shirts and black bow ties with blue dinner suits.

The blue dinner jacket suit and the jacket coat's white night suit consisted of a black waist-length jacket with gold button (clerk) or silver buttons (first and lower librarians). The jacket is double-breasted, but not overlapping, and held with a buckle. (This is, in contrast to a double-breasted, fully worn-out double-breasted night jacket, or a fully worn double-breasted smoking jacket and buttons). Bullion or imitation bullion rankes are worn on the officer's blue jacket sleeve, and rating badges and service lines are worn by enlisted personnel. On the officer's white dinner jacket, a hard shoulder board is worn. A golden belt worn by officers and the head of a small officer, and a black man by first and lower class officers. Buttons and cufflinks are gold for officers and head and silver for first and lower class officers. Hats or hats are not required with dinner uniforms, but can be worn. For both sexes, it should be worn with outerwear, which is traditionally a cape robe for men and capes for women. Women do not need to remove the headgear in the room while wearing a tiara. The robes of the boats, the tiara, and the headland, all of which are the items of choice, are very rarely seen.

Blue tropical dinner dress combines blue dinner trouser dresses, white summer shirts (short sleeves), appropriate belts, and miniature medals and breast emblems.

An additional uniform, formal attire (white tie), is optional for all assigned officers, but may be prescribed for the captain and above. This uniform is worn with the equivalent of a civil white tie dress. It's almost identical to the blue dinner jacket, except the wing collar shirt, white vest, and white tie worn. A formal blue-tailed coat can also be prescribed.

Coast Guard Member of the U.S. Coast. wearing the same evening dress uniform as the US Navy and US Coast Guard, but with silver silver belts and a Garda Coast Guard trooper badge in place of gold emblem. Small and subordinate officers may, at their option, wear this same uniform, but with black coils and silver buttons.




More

Various organizations and civil groups may have cluttered clothing.

St John Ambulance

St. John Ambulance may have a messy uniform as part of a national uniform. Every messy uniform varies from country to nation; However, it generally reflects the colors of St. John, being Black, silver (white or gray) and red.

Pieces and styles, as well as equipment generally follow the British military style.


See also

  • Court uniforms and dress in the United Kingdom
  • Formal and Semi formal wear
  • Red Sea Rig
  • Windsor uniform
  • Dress service



References

Source log

Bibliografi

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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