
Butler's Tailcoat
British butler's black formal suit
The butler's tailcoat is the black formal suit worn by male head servants in 19th- and early-20th-century British aristocratic households. Its defining feature is the tailcoat itself — cut off at the waist in front and split into two long tails at the back — originally noble evening wear, later adopted for butlers to mark a visible hierarchy. Where the master wore white tie and white waistcoat, the butler wore black tie and black waistcoat: nearly matching but unmistakably subordinate. Beneath the tailcoat went a starched white shirt with wing collar and black bow tie; a pocket watch chain crossed the waistcoat horizontally; white gloves completed the dress. The butler, chief of all male household staff, supervised wine service, guest reception, and other servants — his immaculate uniform enforced by strict standards. Characters like Stevens in The Remains of the Day and Alfred Pennyworth in Batman have spread the image globally.
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