Read about a few men who wear (or wore) bow ties as an act of defiance, and check out a tie that makes a strong statement. Bow ties are cool.
I don't know what it is about bow ties, but I love a good bow tie on a man.
I never go black tie. I never grew up wearing ties or bow ties or anything.
After I had this idea to be Bill Nye the Science Guy, I wore straight ties the first couple times, and then I got this thing going and I started wearing bow ties.
I like America anyway. In Japan we are much more formal. If two friends are separated for a long time and they meet they bow and bow and bow. They keep bowing without exchanging a word. Here they slap each other on the back and say: Hello, old man, how goes everything.
I thought my dad was out of work, because my friends had fathers with briefcases who'd go off somewhere with bow ties on. But my father would finish breakfast and go back to his room.
You can't dribble on bow ties.
Ties of blood are not always ties of friendship; but friendship founded on merit, on esteem, and on mutual trust, becomes more vital and more tender when strengthened by the ties of blood.
I love wearing bow ties for no particular reason.
A gentleman can never have too many bow ties.
I like bow ties, and I certainly spent a lot of time defending them.
I was a show-off as a kid. I was wearing bow ties and matching coloured trousers.
As a southern man, there's two things I'm definitely not scared of: bow ties and white pants.
Bow, bow, ye lower middle classes!
Bow, bow, ye tradesmen, bow, ye masses!
Police boxes, tweed blazers and bow ties feel quite English, but I think that is one of his virtues, one of the strengths of 'Doctor Who.'
I want to shoot an elk with a bow. Mind you, I've never hunted in my life. But I feel like if I'm ever going to hunt, it's going to be with a bow. I just feel like a bow requires more skill.