What Is The Difference Between A Sport Coat, Blazer, & Suit Jacket?

What is the difference between a sport coat, blazer, & suit jacket?

Postby Bea17 » 25 Jan 2011, 04:22

Obviously a suit is made up of pants and a jacket that match. What I want to know is what differentiates a sport coat, a blazer, and the jacket portion of a suit? In other words, if the pants to a suit were torn, could one throw the pants away and keep the jacket as a sport coat or a blazer (assuming of course that the jacket is a neutral color with no pinstripes and whatnot)? Also, which is more formal a sport coat or a blazer, or are they about the same formality?

Thanks
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Re: What is the difference between a sport coat, blazer, & suit jacket?

Postby Pru » 26 Jan 2011, 02:30

As my tailor explained it: sports coat may be more than one color and compliments rather than matches a pair of pants; blazers are a solid color and compliment rather than match a pair of pants, and a suit jacket matches a pair of pants.
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Re: What is the difference between a sport coat, blazer, & suit jacket?

Postby Bree98 » 26 Jan 2011, 03:45

Its usually the material and thickness. Some brands dont really make a distiction. Sport coats are usually longer. I would just try to buy suit pants that match...wouldnt want to risk looking tacky.
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Re: What is the difference between a sport coat, blazer, & suit jacket?

Postby Emme76 » 26 Jan 2011, 06:55

The number of buttons and the occasion where it was worn. Don't laugh about the buttons, I have an article from 1926 decrying modern men wearing the wrong number of buttons to the office!

Let's go back to the twenties when these distinctions of dress were quite important for every well dressed man to know. Blazers were originally emblazoned with a badge or patch from a private school or club. They were usually navy blue, or the official colour of the club school whatever. Now it means a solid colored jacket, three buttons in two rows (double breasted) worn with non-matching pants. A sport coat was distinguished from a business suit or formal suit by having three or more buttons in the front and a looser fit, There would be pocket flaps, extra pockets, and top-stitched details. The sport jacket was also made in colours such as white, beige, stripes, light blues, pale greys and browns, and others. It was also made from less formal fabrics such as tweeds, linens silks etc back when business and formal suits were always dark wools in either black or dark grey. It was considered informal and for everyday wear, such as boating, golfing, walking, afternoons, but not evening or business. It wasn't required to match the pants. Matching pants and sport jackets were known as "dittos" back in the twenties. Today's sport jackets are dressy jackets, looser cut than a business suit jacket, with or without pocket flaps worked in various fabrics and colours. They may or may not have elbow patches. Business suits are made of fine fabrics, fitted, tailored, lined, and the pants and jacket are made from the same fabric. Business suits usually have two or three buttons, some modern cuts have four, but only two or three are fastened.

In modern times the designations have all blended into one. A solid color blazer is more formal than a tweed sport coat. Solids are always consiered more formal in men's wear. If the jacket coordinates with the pants, then it's suitable for daytime or office wear. If your problem is a nice jacket with worn out pants, then keep the jacket and buy new pants that coordinate.
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