Showing posts with label Choir Uniforms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Choir Uniforms. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Choir Uniforms: An Evolution of Choral Fashion

I have had my fair share of choral uniform fashions over the past few years and I would like to document some of them here.

In my formative years of Junior Choir, we wore white collared shirts and black pants with a red bow-tie like appendage wrapped around our neck. The way the red tie sat kind of reminded me of a red tongue.


In my years of Intermediate Choir, we wore navy kilts and I remember having to buy my own kilt pin for the skirt. I was not aware, until this point, that kilt pins just looked like large safety pins. Again, the navy kilt was topped off with a long-sleeved white collar shirt.


Then I entered a second choir, Chamber Choir, in addition to Intermediate Choir, and since this was a brand new choir, we received brand new uniforms! However, during one of our first performances, when we did not have uniforms yet, we wore the Children's Choir uniforms which were yellow and brown plaid jumpers which kind of looked like birthing gown jumpers with white opaque tights and underneath was a short-sleeved navy mock neck shirt.











Once Chamber Choir did get uniforms, however, they kind of looked like Nun outfits but they always looked quite good on stage. Strength in numbers! The Chamber Choir uniform was a long navy dress-jumper but underneath was a long sleeved white shirt and we attached a crisp white collar around our neck.
















In a smaller group that I sang in with my friends, Con Fuoco, budget was of a concern so we mainly just wore the black clothes we owned but to tie things together we all wore a different coloured music scarf which we all owned. However, we went through quite an evolution of uniforms since we had casual and formal looks :)
















Another uniform I have worn is with the University choir I was in last year. This dress was a much more standard uniform, something that can be ordered out of a uniform catalogue. It was just a long short-sleeved dress in an hourglass shape but in the centre there was a triangle of white fabric showing to give contrast to the dress.



















Currently, the women's choir, Belle Canto, I am in has quite a nice uniform where we wear long black skirts and we wear velvet cardigan on top with a velvet tank top underneath. What makes this uniform special is the rhinestone buttons on the velvet cardigan. They sparkle under stage lights. We are currently on the hunt for some new uniforms since we want something that isn't as hot as velvet when we tour in the summers. We received some sample dresses from uniform companies and a few showed promise while the others just looked like medieval witch costumes. It's alright though since we're recycling some of these witch costumes because we're putting on a Broadway Fundraiser and we need witch costumes for the girls singing the part of Elphaba from Wicked. Resourcefulness at its best!
















Overall, it's interesting to see the variety of choral uniforms out there. Each of one them are unique to that particular choir and each one represents a choir's image. What a uniform is really doing is allowing choristers to physically and visually display a unified front in performance and it is amazing the kind of power and self-confidence that emerges from wearing a uniform. Not only does a choir need to sound unified but they must look and feel unified. Whether the uniform is good, bad, or ugly is not of utmost importance, rather, the way a chorister feels while wearing the uniform is one of the most important things to consider.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Choir Uniforms: Do's and Dont's

As any chorister can attest to, when joining a choir, acquiring the uniform becomes an integral part of the choral experience. I know this may sound sad...but I don't know if I have ever seen a choir uniform that I've loved. But I suppose that's just it, choir uniforms should not be visually evaluated on an individual basis, but they must be critiqued as a whole since the overall effect of a uniformed choir is what's most important. Of course, that does not stop my Mom from making fun of the choral uniforms I have donned in the past, but it is good to know that at least you are not alone and that your fellow choristers share the same fashion fate as you do. Furthermore, from seeing many uniforms worn by other choirs, I think I have formulated a set of do's and dont's for choral fashion.

Do:
  • Find a cut and style flattering to everybody. One of the biggest challenges!
  • Keep colours simple. Even if bright orange may be your color...a whole choir wearing bright orange may just hurt the audiences' eyes. As always, black is the classic musician color choice
  • Uniforms require a decent fit to look polished. I understand (and have worn) church robes are oversized draped at best, but if you want to take your look to an international level, it is all about a trim silhouette
  • Find uniforms that travel well. Wrinkling is one of the main woes of a choir uniform on tour...or learn how to fold your uniform to reduce wrinkles.
  • Pinch your cheeks before going on stage to give yourself a natural blush
  • Match uniform pieces-it's all in the details. This means hosiery (I have seen such a range of black tights in my choral years) and shoes if possible. Having one chorister wear black platforms and another wearing ballet flats is enough of a difference to draw attention.
Don't:
  • Show too much skin. You're not putting on THAT kind of show
  • Just throw together random accessories and hope they match. Certain rules must be followed. If you tell everybody to just accessorize with red...you are going to get a lots of different red hues
  • Often, less is more. In my more serious choral experiences any excessive makeup, nailpolish, and accessories needed to be removed since the audience is there to listen to choral music and not be distracted by your decadent accessories. So while it may seem like a choir concert is a great arena to showcase your diamond choker under the sparkle of stage lights, it has no place in a choir since it is a group performance not a solo one.
What's most important is that the uniform is the last thing an audience notices. If too much attention is on the uniform...then something is wrong. The uniform is there to set the first impression and tone of the choir even before they sing. Thus, when a choir looks polished and put-together, naturally, this translates into the way a listener or adjudicator perceives and hears a choir. In a future post I will document some of my own choral fashion experiences.

Until then, take care readers!