romothesavior wrote:Brooks Brothers ties are heinously overpriced for what I'd consider above-average quality at best, and that's coming from one of the biggest Brooksies on TLS.
Tie Bar gets love because they're good ties for a low price. They're thick and quality-made, they tie really well (so easy to get a perfect dimple), and they excel at churning out good basic styles (not crazy about their other stuff). They're every bit as good as a $50 tie. And in the places that they're not (e.g., their "faux grenadine" ties) they're up front about it (e.g, "Hey for $15 a tie we can't make you a true grenadine tie but this is a pretty solid pickup for $15).
IMO, spending a fortune on a tie is just stupid. How often do you really wear any given tie? Once or twice a month, tops? Even if you work in a business formal environment, maybe once every other week or so? And if you have a fleet of ties, maybe less than that. So why spend $50, or even $100 on something you'll wear once in a blue moon? Especially for people ITT just looking for OCI-wear, Tie Bar gives you the basics for cheap so you can focus on other aspects of your wardrobe. If someone is looking for a couple conservative, solid or pindot patterned ties for OCI, that's by far the best place to go.
While tiebar is great for filling out a tie wardrobe with ease (albeit not really on the cheap in that there are much cheaper ways to create a solid tie wardrobe), I sorta' disagree with the assertion that tiebar should be the go-to on OCI ties. If there's ever an occasion where you'll want to lay hands on a tie and make sure the shape is right, all the pindots are aligned perfectly both horizontally and vertically, that it dimples properly, etc., it's on your interview tie. It's probably true that I'm the only one out there who is seriously bugged by askew tie patterns, but, as long as you're doing it, you might as well have that one tie that is pretty close to perfect.
To be clear, I really don't think that you have to spend over $10 for an interview tie (I have a collection of around twenty "perfect" ties that I reserve for important shit and paid over $15 on maybe five of them, whereas they retail anywhere from $29 to $395). I just think the usually-slightly-off tiebar ties shouldn't really be one's first choice for an interview tie.
JamMasterJ wrote:I think the only time when you're gonna see a really noticeable difference is when you are looking at Kiton 7-folds or whatever
If you put a Kiton 7-fold next to romo's lineup, I'd put money on a majority of the people looking at it blind will guess that it's among the cheapest ties there. There are ties that are noticeably superior to other ties—for instance, if romo's lineup has an upper-line Zegna, that's the one that the average person will pick—but the ties that are renowned amongst tie snobs for their incredible craftsmanship, silk, etc., rarely look the part. Kiton 7-folds are of excellent quality, but the average example will look like some vintage job you picked up at the thrift store to the uninitiated (i.e., everybody you'll see today).
MinEMorris wrote:I've heard through the grapevine that ties are one of the few items at men's department stores that are actually sold at ridiculous markups (~800% if I recall correctly). My guess is that places that sell "cheaper" ties aren't skimping much on quality; they're just reducing profit margin.
Every single thing at every single department store is sold at a ridiculous markup. Ties are among the worst offenders, but not by as much as you might think.
-Pufer