

Choose the right tuxedo pants
Tuxedos have been in style since a very long time. Any designer men's collection would be incomplete without a Tuxedo. Tuxedo is a tailored suit used ...

Tuxedos have been in style since a very long time. Any designer men’s collection would be incomplete without a Tuxedo. Tuxedo is a tailored suit used for semi-formal or formal wear. Tuxedo pants should be in the same wool as the jacket, with the side seams decorated in an inch-wide satin ribbon matching the lapel. The shirt is white with linked cuffs. The shirt may be pleated with a turn-down collar and French or barrel cuffs, or have a pique bib front with either a turn-down collar and French cuffs or a wing collar and barrel cuffs.
Tuxedo pants are sewn from a wide variety of fabrics and colors; brighter colors and unconventional designs are pervasive in tuxedo styling. However, most tuxedos are black in color. Though tuxedos are available for purchase in the market, most men rent these fancy suits for special occasions as tuxedos cannot be worn frequently after the wedding and is considered to be an unwise investment by many men.

One of the first things you should consider while purchasing tuxedo pants is the color. Tuxedo pants come in a variety of color and styles. The pants are available in black, ivory, white, Grey and various other colors. Tuxedo pants may be pleated or non-pleated.
The pants of a tuxedo are like any other pant. If you’re renting a tuxedo, it will be made of virtually indestructible material that will not be as comfortable as the semi-comfortable pants that go with your suit.
Tuxedo pants have no cuffs. For decoration, they have sheen satin or silk strip running on the outside of the leg generally of the same material as the front collar of the tuxedo jacket. Rental pants have a tightening mechanism so that they can be fitted accordingly. In a custom tuxedo, the pants are held in place with suspenders.
Lloyd Hill, a made-to-measure suit specialist with Burberry, asks the grooms to be careful against buying the wrong type of pants. “Men screw up with tuxes when they buy the wrong styles for their body types,” Hill explains. “Some guys are heavier and want a flat front pant, but there’s no room for the hips and thighs. The belly hangs over…it’s rough.” Slimmer guys, advises Hill, should wear flat front pants; heavier men should go with pleated front pants.