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  1. What to wear to Cheltenham Festival – with Alice Hare
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What to wear to Cheltenham Festival – with Alice Hare

Our stylist is back... this time with some sterling advice on how to dress for a day at the races – and tweed takes centre stage.

In late January, I attended a race day at Cheltenham. As I bought my usual porridge from Pret before boarding the train at Paddington, the man serving me let out a groan. “It’s not a race day today, is it?” he asked. (I think my tweed suit with giant shoulder pads and big-as-a-solar-disc hat perhaps gave me away). “Umm, yes, sorry,” I answered, before adding, “one tip: book off the second week of March. You’ll thank me later.” For come the second week of March, Paddington station becomes even more than usual a veritable hive of activity, positively awash with tweed. Why so? Racegoers heading to the Festival, of course.  

The Festival? Speak to any racing fan and there’s only one festival of any importance in their annual calendar. Hint: it’s not of the Glastonbury or Reading variety. Think less techno, more tweed, less mosh pit, more meet-me-in-the-Guinness-Village. Cheltenham Festival, the name of the week-long, annual celebration of jumps racing that takes place at Cheltenham Racecourse, holds quasi-mythic status in the minds of racing folk. And it’s a favourite of the royals (indeed, one of the second day races is named after the Queen Mother). 

An image of racehorses being walked in a circle with crowds of people watching on.An image of racehorses being walked in a circle with crowds of people watching on.
Cheltenham Festival is a key highlight of the racing calendar. But what to wear?

As with all good race meetings, there’s a universally acknowledged but simultaneously unspoken dress code at the Festival. Get it wrong and immediately not only mark yourself out as an outsider but risk a miserable day due to impracticality. Not exactly a recipe for happiness. Heed my warning: Cheltenham is cold. Very. It could be a pleasant day on the outside world but enter the racecourse’s gates and an icy wind akin only to that of the White Witch’s Narnia descends. I jest not. It’s a truth universally acknowledged amongst racing fans, a mystery inexplicable but accepted. Il fait très froid. Hace muy frío. Got it?  

Faced with such elements, there’s only one sartorial solution. Enter tweed. Warm and waterproof, it’s become a true uniform of the Festival. While at other jumps season meetings, other winter fabrics abound in addition to tweed, Cheltenham is very heavily tweed-leaning. It’s useful to have such a specific dress code (especially when it’s an unspoken one), but this perceived simplicity is deceptive, for with it comes the risk of looking like every single other person there. How to demonstrate individual style while still looking like you emerged from the womb tweed-clad and Cheltenham-ready? Read on for my guide. 

Men’s outfits for Cheltenham Festival

Again, opt for a men's tweed jacket and tweed trousers as a base and build from there. Underneath, a men's checked shirt, particularly a Tattersall, is perfectly at home at Cheltenham. Its check is named after the horse market of the same name, after all. Luckily, Schöffel is to men’s checked shirts what Hamleys is to toys.  

Next? The tie. A race day essential, in my opinion. (When I am queen, my first law will be to make the wearing of suits without ties illegal). And even if you opt to wear a more modern, Nehru-collared men's tweed vest instead of a traditional tweed jacket, a tie is the perfect way to counterbalance that modernity with some old-school tradition. 

For a similarly expert balancing act of modernity and traditional style, I love a tie poking out from under a men's quarter zip instead of an old-school v-neck or roundneck jumper. A good tweed trouser and covert coat will see you through Cheltenham Festivals for decades to come – it’s the addition of small details like a quarter zip instead of a roundneck, and a Nehru gilet instead of a classic sports jacket, that will modernise your look.    

The last important point for nailing men’s style at Cheltenham: don’t be tempted to scrimp on your hat – it will ruin your whole look instantly. In a market awash with cheap fedoras and trilbies, Schöffel's traditional men's tweed caps will keep you covered. 

Before you scramble for a seat on the Paddington to Cheltenham service, learn all about what to see and do at Cheltenham Festival.

Women’s outfits for Cheltenham Festival 

Use a three-piece tweed formula as the base of your outfit and add individuality from there through clever accessorising. Start with a women's tweed skirt, then a tweed waistcoat and finally a tweed coat; a style triple threat. Schoffel’s British-milled women's tweed delivers lightweight warmth with zero stuffiness, while their jewel-hued satin linings are all kinds of luxe. Layer underneath a women's shirt or blouse.

Ribbed tights will protect your legs from Cheltenham’s notorious chill – I adore a sheer tight but they’ll only work at Cheltenham if you want shivers that make your knees knock. Shoe-wise, eschew the knee-high boot you might naturally reach for to go with this look (everyone else will be wearing them) in favour of an on-trend Mary Jane – they unite form with function (hello, comfortable block heel). Give velvet or suede styles a spray with Crep Protect before heading to the Festival – it’s a suede waterproofer I swear by for protecting shoes from mud and rain.  

A bag with a top handle you can sling onto your wrist means you’ll be able to juggle Guinness, race card and greeting people without helplessly grasping at a clutch bag too. I’d use headgear as a means of counteracting the practicality of the tweed with some opulence – think regal, diadem-style headbands and elegant, vintage-inspired beret and cloche styles. Put simply, go extra. Our model’s burgundy velvet headband is by Emi Milverton, and her camel beret-style hat is by Lock & Co – the oldest hatters in the world, no less. I’m also slightly obsessed by the faux fur hat Pippa Middleton wore to Cheltenham in 2013 – an instant injection of undiluted, unapologetic glamour to practical tweed. Head to Helen Moore for similar options.

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