You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more
Black permanent marker?
In the unlikely event you're in the same part of East Cambridgeshire as I am, borrow mine. I had to go to one yesterday, so I know it's in good order (a Debenhams polyester though, rather than silk).
I don't know how to get the marks out, sorry. I take mine to the local dry cleaners who regularly work miracles (soy sauce out of silk ties, somehow) but appreciate you don't have time for that.
Just bin it. Ties are horrible.
Thanks
No waistcoat but will wear it and keep jacket on
There's nothing you can do at home that'll get a silk tie clean. Don't be tempted to even use water, you'll probably stain it, you'll definitely wrinkle it. Hide the mark, or buy new.
@elshalimo - think you're in the Calder valley somewhere? I'm in brighouse and have a clean black tie if you want to borrow it 🙂
Don't wear a tie?
Advice for treating table tops that have ring marks in the polish is often to use a rag and rub fag ash into the mark until the mark disappears.
Do you smoke?
I wore a different tie in the end. Nobody cared.
I wore a different tie in the end. Nobody [s]cared[/s] wanted to make a fuss at a funeral, but will never speak to you again.
ftfy 😉
I wore a different tie in the end. Nobody cared.
Under the circumstances, I’m honestly not surprised. Just so long as it didn’t have Bugs Bunny or Daffy Duck on it, or a picture of a fish.
I wore a different tie in the end.
I hope it was a big multi-coloured jazzy one. Black is so depressing.
More seriously,
Funerals are deeply strange things that most people are fortunate enough not to have much experience of and there is no 'correct' way to grieve. Everyone else attending should be too lost in their own thoughts to worry about the sartorial elegance of the rest of the congregation.
My mum passed last year. I honestly couldn't tell you now whether I wore a tie or not. The 12 months from March 2023 have all been a bit of a blur, I can only remember snippets. I'm sure as hell not sitting here now thinking "well, it was a lovely service, but did you notice that Uncle Keith wasn't wearing a tie?" I can barely remember who was there, even.
I hope it was a big multi-coloured jazzy one. Black is so depressing.
My hot take is that a funeral should be a celebration of life rather than a mourning of loss. I'd rather friends rocked up to my funeral in an Iron Maiden tee or a Hawaiian shirt rather than a suit and tie. I tried to inject a bit of levity into my mum's funeral because I know 100% that it's exactly what she would've wanted, her one overriding characteristic that everyone will remember her for is her rapier wit. It probably went down like a lead balloon in some quarters but that registers a zero on my Givea****ometer, she'd have loved it and that's all that matters.
By contrast I lost my dad, what, over 10 years ago now? His funeral was a thoroughly miserable affair, some bloke in a frock who'd never met him tossing on about "loving father" and "devoted husband" and the usual boilerplate shite he'd probably read out a dozen times that week alone. I thought I'd come to the wrong event, he wasn't describing anyone I recognised.
she’d have loved it and that’s all that matters.
Chapeau ! Some funerals are sombre affairs and others are more formal. I've been to funerals where black clothing was banned, bright colours only etc and even one where everyone just wore jeans & t-shirt. It's horses for courses.
This was a traditional Irish funeral and I wore the tie as that was what was expected and how everyone turned out for the day. It was a dark blue with embossed paisley patterned tie (for the fashionistas).
I much prefer the celebration of life style funerals rather than the churchy they're with God now and in a better place variants. To me it's all big man in sky bad juju bollocks but I respect the wishes and beliefs of others and suspend my cynical thoughts for the duration of it. It's not the best place for a theological discussion when someone is neck deep in grief.
That's the other thing, isn't it. Who is this for?
My mum never expressed any wishes for how her funeral might be conducted so I was operating on best guess. But at the risk of sounding mercenary, ultimately it was my rodeo and it is the hardest thing I have ever done in my life.
I didn't see anyone else with their hands in their pocket offering to help with finances and the people who came to the pseudo-wake afterwards, literally just a pint in the pub across the road from the crem, were my friends. Her blood relations - cousins are all that are left now - couldn't even be arsed with giving me/her half an hour of their time when I was in bits, so they waive any right to whinge.
@woody2000 - thanks, I missed that earlier. That was a very kind offer