Cufflinks
actually pre-date the button, safety pin, zipper or Velcro. Luckily,
advancements have been made since the first cufflinks were made. Cufflinks are
a great way to add a some personal style to suit or dress shirt. With so many
new styles now, they can also be a way to support your favorite teams, celebrate
a wedding, or simply complete a look.
How to
wear cufflinks
• Fold the cuffs back, making sure that they
form a neat and even line at the end of the sleeves.
• Hold the cuffs together. Hold the two open
edges of the shirt cuff together. Unlike cuffs with buttons where one side of
the cuff folds inside the other, with cufflinks, the two sides lay flat away
from the wrist as shown in the photo above.
• Line up the holes. Make sure the holes for
the cufflink line up.
• Insert the cufflink and secure it. When your
arm is at your side, the decorative part of the cuff link should be facing
outwards. The way you secure the cufflink this will vary slightly depending
upon the style of cufflinks:
• Bullet
back closure - The most common of all cufflinks backings and the easiest to put
on.
This
style has a torpedo, or bullet shaped, capsule that is suspended between two
posts. The bullet can be flipped on its axis to manipulate it through the
button holes in the cuff, and then flipped horizontal to secure the cufflink on
the shirt.
• Whale
back closure - This style has a straight post combined with a flat, solid whale
tail that flips flat to insert, and flips back in place to secure the cuff.
• Fixed Backing - Fixed backings are an
extension of the cufflink face.
This
means that the post and backing are formed from the same piece of metal as the
front side of the cufflink. The backing does not bend or move in any way. May
require a bit more work to put on, but benefit in the long run from not having
moving parts.
• Chain Link - The most traditional form of
cufflinks feature a chain link.
Chain
link cufflinks are the original form of cufflinks and are found most often in
items of English production. Chain links characteristically have 2 sides that
are joined together by a chain link. Due to the agility required to put them
on, these are certainly for the expert level cufflink connoisseur. The benefit
of this style is that there is something to look at on both sides of the cuff.
Additionally, chain link cufflinks typically allow for a looser cuff.
• Reversible - Fixed back cufflinks that have a
design on the back end, rather than a plain fixed disc.
Allows
an appealing design on both sides of the cuff and enables you to switch what is
shown on the main side of the cuff, like having 2 pairs in one.
• Ball
Return - A chain link cufflinks where the backing is composed of a ball of
silver or gold.
The
upside is that they are very easy to put on and you get the looseness benefit
of the chain link backing.
The balls are also more appealing than a bullet or
plain fixed back.
With Mary Onyeure
... Making SENSE of digital revolution!
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