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From February 1812, the coatee remained the same colour while plumes were no longer issued for helmets.
Further, cadet uniforms have little changed; the coatee, worn in parades, dates back to the war of 1812.
The coatee was fastened with practical buttons bearing the Crown onto button-holes.
Given the wings on the shoulders, this would have been the coatee of a man of the grenadier or the light infantry company.
The Earl Marshal's coatee is also scarlet, with dark blue collar and cuffs.
Full dress coatee is optional.
Coatee's rhythmic reassurances of the Lord's (and her own rather more palpable) protection always sent me straight to dreamland.
The 7th regiment wore a yellow coatee and the 8th regiment wore an orange one.
Coatee: dark blue cloth, single-breasted, stand collar.
He wore a double-breasted blue coatee, bright with chevrons, brass buttons, and gold-braided epaulets.
McAllister finished the right front of the coatee, as Matey called it, cast off, and looked again at the half-grandfather clock with a sigh.
Remarkably, a uniform coatee of a man of the RNSR still exists.
The Prince Charlie (coatee) is considered to be less formal, although when introduced it was to be worn with a White lace jabot.
In 1855, the infantry's tight-fitting and impractical coatee with its vestigial tails was replaced by a loosely cut single-breasted tunic of French inspiration.
Water and the two metals form an electrochemical cell, and if the coating is less reactive than the coatee, the coating actually promotes corrosion.
Unlike the coatee, which is cut like a mess jacket, the doublet has braided "tashes" (otherwise known as Inverness skirts/flaps) at the front and back.
In full dress the coatee's chest, back, tails back and front, collar, cuffs and pocket flaps were all decorated with gold oak-leaf embroidery.
The Sharpshooter companies wore a dark green Prussian-style coatee and a tall hat of Austrian origin with an elongated brim turned-up at one side.
The Lord Great Chamberlain wears a unique form of Court uniform, his coatee being scarlet (with scarlet facings) rather than blue.
It had a blue tail coat (or "coatee"), lined with black silk, faced and laced scarlet, gilt buttons, waistcoat, breeches or trousers.
She took with her only what a native woman of good class would take; she wore a faded old blue and white chequered sarong with a white coatee.
He washed, shaved and put on his best clothes-green cloth trousers and rough home-spun jacket, over which he threw a half-lined, goat-skin coatee.
His coatee survived and is on display in Hamburg, Germany, in the "Museum für Hamburger Geschichte".
From c.1790 until after the Crimean War a red tail coat with short tails (known as a coatee) was part of the infantry uniform of the British army.
The coatee had white silk linings, and was worn with white breeches, white gloves, and patent leather court shoes with gilt buckles.