Academic dress in the United States


Academic regalia in the United States has a history going back to the colonial colleges era. It has been most influenced by the academic dress traditions of Europe. There is an Inter-Collegiate Code that sets out a detailed uniform scheme of academic regalia that is voluntarily followed by many, though not all institutions entirely adhere to it.

Elements

Gowns and robes

and master's gowns in the United States are similar to some of their counterparts in the United Kingdom, particularly Oxford. The main differences are that the bachelor's gown is designed to be worn closed and that the sleeves of the modern gown are square at the end instead of pointed as the Code calls for. The master's gown sleeve is oblong and, though the base of the sleeve hangs down, it is square-cut at the rear part of the oblong shape. The front part has an arc cut away, and there is a slit for the wrist opening, but the rest of the arc is closed. The shape is evocative of the square-cut liripipe incorporated into many academic hoods. The master's gown is designed to be worn open or closed.
Doctoral gowns are typically black, although some schools use gowns in the school's colors. The Code calls for the outside shell of the hood to remain black in that case. Doctoral gowns have bell sleeves with three velvet bands on them and velvet facing on the front of the gown. The Code calls for the gown trim to be either black or the color designated for the field of study in which the doctorate is earned, with the proviso that the degree of Doctor of Philosophy uses the dark blue velvet of philosophy regardless of the particular field studied. Some gowns expose a necktie or cravat when closed. They are designed to be worn open or closed in the front.
Members of the Board of Trustees or other governing body officers of a college or university, regardless of their degrees, are entitled to wear doctor's gowns, faced only with black velvet and black velvet bars on the sleeves. However, their hoods may be only those of the degree actually held by the wearer. The color standardization for the outside shell of the hood as black provides flexibility of use and helps facilitate this practice.

Hoods

The hood's coloring and size represents the type and subject of degree earned, as well as the institution from which it was awarded. Though no shape is specified in the Code, American bachelors and masters usually wear the Wales simple shape with a split salmon cut; doctors wear the same shape but with "panels" attached to the sides.
Candidates may have the hood ceremoniously placed upon them, as is done at some British universities, or a college or school may 'self-hood' en masse at the appropriate time during the ceremony. Additionally, the Code allows for the wearing of the hood into the commencement ceremony as part of the academic procession, but only if neither of the two procedures above are being employed. The Code also states: "It is quite appropriate for the bachelor's gown to be worn without a hood." Many institutions, particularly larger ones, have therefore dispensed with the bachelor's hood at commencement ceremonies altogether, though a graduate is still entitled to wear one once the degree is conferred. Both honorary and earned doctoral degrees are very often conferred by the highest academic officer of an institution bestowing the appropriate hood at the podium, regardless of the procedure being followed for other candidates at the ceremony.
Only one hood should be worn at any given time. The regalia indicating the highest degree attained is usually worn, though the Code seems to allow for a graduate to revert for some occasion to the entire academic costume of a lesser degree earned. Those who hold multiple degrees of the same level may wear at any given time the regalia, in its entirety, of any one degree earned. The Code does not allow for 'mixing-and-matching.' The one exception is for officers of the academic institution who, while wearing a doctoral gown of the University being served, may display one hood from any degree earned from any institution.

Headwear

Headwear is an important component of cap-and-gown, and the academic costume is not complete without it. The headwear may vary with the level of academic achievement and, to some extent, on the individual academic institution's specifications.
There is at some colleges and universities a practice of moving the tassel from one side to the other on graduating, but this is a modern innovation that would be impractical out of doors due to the vagaries of the wind. However, this mark of transition to graduate status has the benefit of taking less time than more traditional indicators such as the individual conferring of the hood or a complete change of dress part-way through the ceremony. In such universities it is common for undergraduates to begin the commencement ceremony with their tassels on the right. Switching the tassel to the left may be done individually or as a group. For doctoral and masters students, the tassel commonly begins and remains on the left.

Other adornments

A number of other items such as cords, stoles or aiguillettes representing various academic achievements or other honors are also worn at the discretion of some degree-granting institutions. The Code disapproves of their use on or over academic regalia, saying that "shoes and other articles of visible apparel worn by graduates should be of dark colors that harmonize with the academic costume. Nothing else should be worn on the academic gown."
Apparel and tokens representing awards and honors are not considered a component of academic dress, not only because the Code suggests avoiding them, but also because they are often worn without the defining cap and gown, and they are usually not worn by a graduate with academic robes after the Commencement year in which the honor was awarded. Nevertheless, they are often seen with academic regalia in the United States, and are therefore mentioned here.
The colors allocated to the various fields of learning have been largely standardized in the United States by the Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume, and accepted by the American Council on Education in its Academic Costume Code. The color assigned to a given hood trim and/or tassels and—where appropriate—gown facings, should be as closely related as possible to the field studied. For example, one who has earned a degree in animal husbandry would wear the maize of agriculture, as no color is specific to the subject of animal husbandry, and it is generally included within the broader field of agriculture. Less simply, mathematics is traditionally among the liberal arts, which are represented by white, but can also be considered a formal science, represented by golden yellow for science.
The codified colors associated with the different academic disciplines are as shown below:
FacultyColorSample
AgricultureMaize
Arts, letters, humanitiesWhite
Commerce, accountancy, businessDrab
DentistryLilac
EconomicsCopper
EducationLight blue
EngineeringOrange
Fine arts, architectureBrown
Forestry, environmental studies, sustainabilityRusset
JournalismCrimson
LawPurple
Library science, Information scienceLemon
MedicineGreen
MusicPink
NursingApricot
Oratory, communications studies, broadcastingSilver gray
Pharmacy[|Olive green]
PhilosophyDark blue
Physical education, manual therapy, physical therapySage Green
Public administration, public policy, foreign servicePeacock blue
Public healthSalmon
Science Golden yellow
Social workCitron
Theology, divinityScarlet
Veterinary scienceGrey

The code calls for a graduate to display the color of the subject of the degree obtained, not the degree itself. For example, if a graduate is awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in business, the trimming should be drab, representing commerce/accountancy/business, rather than white, representing the broader arts/letters/humanities; if the BA were in economics, the trim would be copper; if in environmental studies, it would be russet, and so on. If the BA were in a language, a subject within the humanities and not otherwise assigned a unique color, the velvet would indeed be white. Similarly, if a Bachelor of Science degree is awarded for physics, the velvet trim should be golden yellow, representing physics as one of the natural sciences; however, if the BS were in engineering, the trim would be orange, or if in education, the trim would be light blue. The same method is true of master's degrees and doctorates: a Master of Public Administration in Science and Technology should show trim of golden yellow for science, not peacock blue for public administration; conversely a Master of Science in Public Administration should display peacock blue trim for public administration and not golden yellow for science.
Additionally, it is problematic when a field of study that does not have its own color assigned to it has been considered to be included in more than one discipline, which are represented by different colors. For example, history has traditionally been considered as among the humanities, represented by white, but is also considered a social science, which can be represented by golden yellow. This is often addressed by an academic institution allowing the degree earned to influence - but not determine - color assignment. For instance, a Bachelor of Arts graduate in history might display white, while a Bachelor of Science graduate in history at the same institution could properly display golden yellow, and vice versa. This then can create confusion in the first instance by appearing to display colors based on the degree earned rather than, as stipulated in the Code, the academic field studied.
In 1986, the American Council on Education updated the Code and added the following sentence clarifying the use of the color dark blue for the Doctor of Philosophy degree, which is awarded in any number of fields:
"In the case of the Doctor of Philosophy degree, the dark blue color is used to represent the mastery of the discipline of learning and scholarship in any field that is attested to by the awarding of the degree, and it is not intended to represent the field of philosophy."

The doctorate other than the Ph.D. will be represented by the colors indicated above. For example, the Doctor of Education in Public Health should display salmon pink for public health, not light blue for education, and the Doctor of Public Health in Public Administration should display peacock blue for public administration, not salmon pink for public health. The Doctor of Engineering degree, if no further specialization was made, should be represented by orange, and the Doctor of Ministry by scarlet if no further specialization, etc.

History

Colonial period

The practice of wearing academic regalia in what is now the United States dates to the Colonial Colleges period, and was heavily influenced by European practices and styles. Students at the College of New Jersey and at King's College were required to wear their "college habits" at all times starting in 1755 at Princeton and in 1763 at Columbia.
Shortly after the beginning of the nineteenth century, however, academic dress was rarely worn on a daily basis, according to contemporary sources.

19th century

After the American Civil War, academic dress was generally only worn at ceremonies or when representing the institution, although in some instances the practice has persisted, such as at, where members of one student society continue to wear the gown to class.
Although universities that adopted academic dress assigned specific meanings to them, there was no consistency among the various sets of rules. For example, when the University of Pennsylvania adopted its academic dress statute in April 1887 it abolished hoods. Instead, it assigned eight faculty colors that were shown on the gowns’ yokes.
Columbia adopted an academic dress statute in December of that year. It included the first known American inclusion of the three velvet stripes on the sleeves. Both doctors and masters wore black gowns with sleeve stripes and facing; for masters the velvet was always black, and for doctors the velvet was always purple. Columbia also approved a scarlet gown for doctors’ use on “festal” occasions. Earlier, three stripes adorned the sleeve of a gown depicted in an invitation to Class Day ceremonies at Columbia in 1865.
When New York University adopted its own academic dress in 1891, like Columbia it added the three sleeve stripes but permitted them to be worn in the university’s faculty colors. It also adopted the Edinburgh shape in the for its hoods. Although NYU gave up this shape when the Code was adopted, Harvard adopted it for all its graduates in 1902.
Also starting in 1891, Princeton graduates wore a black gown with an orange stripe between the shoulders, making it perhaps the first American gown in a university’s corporate colors.
These weren’t the only pre-Code gowns in America that departed from black. Hampden-Sydney started using gray gowns in 1893, and the University of the South approved gowns for its higher degrees in the same shapes and colors of Oxford. However, since the university at the time conferred only honorary master’s and doctoral degrees, it’s unknown if anyone ever wore the Oxford-style gowns.

Intercollegiate Code on Academic Costume

In June 1893, the trustees of Princeton appointed one of their members, John J. McCook, to look into creating an academic costume that showed the wearer’s degree, faculty, and alma mater, and to discuss the concept with Columbia, Yale, Harvard and other universities with the goal being “the adoption of a uniform academic costume.”
Columbia hosted the meeting with delegates from Princeton, Yale and New York University attending, and as a “technical adviser” Gardner Cotrell Leonard, whose Albany, N.Y., firm manufactured academic dress.. The meeting took place in either 1894 or 1895 and adopted the Intercollegiate Code of Academic Costume on March 16, 1895. The Code was based on Columbia’s existing statute, and prescribed the cut and style and materials of the gowns, as well as eight colors representing fields of learning. The descriptions, however, are vague compared to the descriptions of academic costume in Europe. For example, no particular shape of hood was specified in the Code. The version Americans typically wear is the Wales simple shape with a split-salmon cut. In the late nineteenth century it was the shape worn by Oxford bachelors; today it is worn by graduates of the University of Wales.
Since 1895, several changes have been made to the Code.

20th century

1932

In 1932 the American Council on Education authorized the appointment of a committee "to determine whether revision and completion of the academic code adopted by the conference of the colleges and universities in 1895 is desirable at this time, and, if so, to draft a revised code and present a plan for submitting the code to the consideration of the institutional members of the Council." The committee essentially adopted the Code in whole and changed it in two ways:
A Committee on Academic Costumes and Ceremonies, appointed by the American Council on Education in 1959, again reviewed the academic dress code and made several changes. They took effect as of 1960. The significant alterations included:
These changes were approved in March 1959. In April, the Committee approved the use of maroon for home economy. The color has never been included in any edition of the ACE book.
As part of the socio-political upheaval of the 1960s in many Western cultures, eschewing academic regalia became a popular means of demonstrating anti-establishment views, particularly in response to the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. Student protests, which had the effect of cancelling graduation ceremonies at some American universities, led to a general relaxing of protocols on academic attire and ceremonial pageantry. After the war, academic regalia continued to be shunned by some who considered it a symbol of elitism. However, since the 1980s, academic regalia has been in resurgence. Some colleges or academic departments allow graduating students to vote on whether or not to wear academic regalia at graduation ceremonies.

1973

More changes were approved by the Committee in 1973, following the “large numbers of requests for advice about academic dress” received by the Committee. The important changes, which first appeared in the 11th edition of the ACE book, include:
The 11th edition also included a contradiction in selecting a faculty color. Since 1960 the color was to be connected not to the title of the degree but to the discipline studied. That suggestion remained in the 11th edition, but in another paragraph was the opposite direction: “For the hood, the border should be white if the degree is awarded in arts, golden yellow if in science.”
Doctors had similarly confusing advice. Interdisciplinary doctorates could wear the faculty color of any of a number of fields. “Thus,” the 1973 Code states, “urban affairs may be distinguished by copper, peacock blue, or another field already assigned...”

1987

Doctoral degrees were clarified in 1987 when all Ph.D. graduates were to wear dark blue as their faculty color. While this was the most visible of changes that took effect that year, it was hardly the only one, and it wasn’t the only change that involved color. Some of the other changes included:
Although readers of the Code may believe it to be an enforceable edict, the current version of the Code points out its permissive nature:
“… it is impossible to lay down enforceable rules with respect to academic costume. The governing force is tradition and the continuity of academic symbols from the Middle Ages. The tradition should be departed from as little as possible … ” In addition, the Committee wrote a memo in 1967 that makes the point directly, pointing out that “the general guidelines are as stated and should not be interpreted as supported by highly detailed and hard-and-fast regulations on file in some central place.”

21st century

Although today in the U.S. academic dress is rarely worn outside commencement ceremonies or other academic rituals such as encaenia and baccalaureate services, those graduation ceremonies have gained in popularity and have expanded to high school graduations, middle school, elementary school and even kindergarten graduation ceremonies.

Special academic regalia of United States universities

More than 400 universities in the U.S. grant the doctoral degree. Of them, more than 125 use academic dress for their doctors that varies from the guidelines found in the code. Some universities limit their unique costumes for doctors only; others provide it for doctors and masters; some provide it for the upper degrees and bachelors too.
Unique academic dress typically separates itself from the Code's standards through color. While the Code sanctions black for gowns at the bachelor's level and above, several American colleges in the late nineteenth century had adopted colored academic dress. When the Code was approved in 1895, black became the only sanctioned color for gowns, caps, and hood shells.
As early as 1912, however, uniformity was challenged when Brown adopted mortarboards for its trustees and fellows in the university color, seal brown. In 1938 Yale began using Yale blue gowns for its masters' and doctors' academic dress.
In 1950 Syracuse began using orange gowns for its academic officers, but not for graduates. Rochester created a red gown for its president and a black gown with gold trim for some of its officers in 1954. In the next year, Harvard adopted crimson for the gowns of its Ph.D. holders.
Other Ivy League universities soon followed suit. Princeton adopted a doctoral gown in 1960 whose shape differed slightly from the Code's standard. The sleeves were somewhat shorter and they were lined in orange; the gown was black with orange trim. The standard shape was recently authorized by Princeton; both are permitted today. Columbia debuted its light blue gowns for all graduates in 1963, following failed attempts in 1948 and 1958 to adopt colored gowns. The gowns Columbia has used since 1963, designed by Jacques Barzun, have a pair of crowns below the yoke; on the bachelor's and master's gown they are embroidered onto a tab while they are embroidered directly into the velvet facing of the doctoral gown. Pennsylvania's distinctive doctoral gown was first used in 1964. It is red but the lower ends of the sleeves are blue.
Deviations from the Code generally fall into one of five categories. Referring to doctoral gowns, these are:
SchoolHood liningDoctoral gownDoctoral capFacing emblemNotesPhoto of doctoral robesRefs
Arizona State UniversityMaroon with Gold ChevronMaroon with Black Velvet TrimBlack Tam
Bastyr UniversityCranberry with Ginger ChevronBlackSeal of Bastyr UniversityHonor Cords are worn for dual track programs
Boston UniversityScarlet and WhiteScarlet and BlackBlack octagonal tamBoston University Coat of ArmsAll undergraduate gowns are also scarlet.
California Institute of TechnologyOrange with White ChevronBlack with orange pipingBlack velvet hexagonal tamSeal of the California Institute of Technology
Carnegie Mellon UniversityCarnegie family tartanBlackBlack tam with Carnegie tartan trim
Case Western Reserve UniversityBlue and GreyBlue and Black
The College of William & MaryBottle green and gold with a silver gray chevronGreen and blackBlack velvet hexagonal tamW and M cypherThe doctoral gown is worn open and does not have a hood.
The bachelor's gown has bottle green trim on the sleeves.
Columbia UniversityColumbia blue with white chevronSlate blue and blackBlack velvet hexagonal tamCrown in slate blueAll robes are slate blue
Cornell UniversityRed with two white chevronsRed with black velvet trimBlack velvetUniversity shield
The Cooper UnionMaroon and gold
Dartmouth CollegeGreenGreen with black velvet trimTudor capPine tree
Duke UniversityBlue with white chevronDuke blue with black velvet trimBlack six-pointed tamDuke Shield
Emory UniversityBlue with gold chevronBlue and goldBlue hexagonal tamSeal of Emory University
Fordham UniversityMaroonMaroon and black; gold pipingBlack octagonal velvet tam, hatband is faced in maroon with material matching the gown; gold tassel in bullionFordham University coat of arms in gold-
Georgetown University"Steele" Grey and Navy BlueNavy Blue, with Dark Grey or Purple Trim, Navy Blue or Gold Metallic pipingDark blue hexagonal tamSeal of Georgetown University
Georgia Institute of TechnologyGold with white chevronGold gown, dark blue velvet, white piping along velvetDark blue hexagonal tam with hatband faced with gold material matching gownSeal of the Georgia Institute of TechnologyMaster's and Bachelor's gowns are black with Seal of the Institute in gold. Bachelor's degree candidates do not wear hood.
Georgia State UniversityNavy blue with red and blue chevronsPh.D graduates wear navy blue gowns with black panels, Law graduates wear black gowns with purple panels.Black hexagonal tamPresident's Seal of Georgia State University
Harvard UniversityCrimsonCrimson and blackBlack square tamDouble Crows Feet Triple Crows Feet The hood is not trimmed in velvet; the faculty of the degree is shown by the color of the crow's feet emblem. Research doctorates wear crimson doctoral gown, while professional doctorates and terminal degrees wear black doctoral gowns with black facings.
Indiana UniversityCream and CrimsonBlack with crimson trimBlack octagonal tamUniversity Seal
Iowa State UniversityDark blue with cardinal and gold trimCardinal and black with gold trimBlack octagonal tamCampanile crest
Johns Hopkins UniversityGold and blackGold with black trimBlack hexagonal tam
Manhattan CollegeWhite with kelly green chevron
Lehigh UniversityBrown with white chevronBrownBrown velvet with yellow tasselUniversity sealBachelor's gowns are brown with the university seal, similar in color and design to the doctoral gowns
Loyola University ChicagoMaroon with gold chevronMaroon and goldMaroon octagonal tamGold university sealBachelor's gowns are maroon and master's gowns are black. Both are made in the standard shapes for those degrees and include white university logos on the sleeves. Bachelor's wear their gowns without hoods.
Louisiana State UniversityNavy blue velvet, purple and gold satinPurple with dark purple velvet liningDark purple velvet hexagonal tam with golden tasselThe seal of Louisiana State University
Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyCardinal red with silver-gray chevronSilver-gray and cardinal redSilver-gray octagonal tamnoneThe velvet trim from the hood signifies by color the type of Doctoral degree: blue trim for PhDs and yellow for ScDs.
Michigan State UniversityGreen and whiteBlackBlack velvet octagonal tamAll undergraduate gowns and mortarboards are green
Northwestern UniversityPurple with gold chevronPurple with black front panels and sleeve chevronsBlack four-cornered tam"1851" emblemPicture at:
Norwich UniversityMaroon with gold chevronNone- no PhD programs--Only professors at Norwich wear academic gowns at graduation and official functions. Being a Senior Military College, undergraduates wear dress blues.
New York UniversityMayfair VioletMayfair Violet and BlackBlack octagonal velvet tam with golden tasselNYU Torch logo with year the "1831"
Ohio State UniversityScarlet and GreyScarlet with Grey panelsBlack TamUniversity Seal
Olivet Nazarene UniversityPurple and GoldBlack with black trimBlack octagonal tamUniversity Seal
Princeton UniversityOrange with black chevronBlack and orangenone
Rice UniversityBlue with white chevronBlue and grayGray square tamOwl of AthenaBachelor's gowns are black and Master's gowns are blue. Additionally, a stole is worn by many to indicate affiliation with one of Rice's residential colleges.
Rochester Institute of TechnologyWhite with brown chevron and orange in the centerBrownBrown tamTraditional Institute Seal
Rutgers UniversityScarletScarlet and blackBlack velvet four-sided tamOld Queen's College University insigniaBachelor's gowns may be scarlet and black, black and green, or all black depending on the school. Masters gowns are black. PhD gowns vary by school from which degree is granted.
Saint Louis UniversityWhite with blue chevronBlack and blackBlack square tam
Saint Joseph's UniversityCrimson with Gray stripeBlack with degree-specific chevrons and front panelingBlack tamPresently, only Ed.D. degrees are presented.
San Francisco State UniversityPurple and White with Gold liningBlackBlackSan Francisco State SealUndergraduate and Graduate gowns are solid purple
Southern Methodist UniversityRed and blueBlue with red panelsRed octagonal tam withUniversity seal
Stanford UniversityCardinal redCardinal red and blackBlack velvet tamUniversity shieldDoctoral gowns are cut in a modified form of the Cambridge doctor gown . The doctor hood is not lined in velvet, but the lining of the gown indicates the field of study.
Texas A&M UniversityMaroon with white chevronMaroon with black trimBlack mortarboard or tamBachelor's and master's gowns are black with a maroon band bearing the university logo at the end of the sleeves.
Tulane UniversityOlive green and sky blueGreen and black, with white trimBlack octagonal tamUniversity "TU" shield
University of AlabamaCrimson and WhiteBlack with Crimson PipingBlack hexagonal tamUniversity of Alabama Seal
University of Californiavaries by campusBlue with gold trimDark blue octagonal tamnone
University of ChicagoMaroonMaroon and blackMaroon and black velvet tamnone
University of CincinnatiRed and blackRed robe with black velvet trimRednone-
University of DaytonRed and blueBlack
University of FloridaOrange and blueBlue with orange pipingBlue octagonal tamSeal of the University of FloridaOnly for research doctorates; other degrees use black robes
University of HawaiiGreen and whiteGreen, black, white, and goldnoneAll undergraduate gowns are also green.
University of HoustonScarlet with White chevronDark gray robes with black velvet panels and red trimBlack velvet octagonal tam with red tasselSeal of the University of Houstonbachelor's and master's degree robes are black with the university seal
University of IdahoSilver and goldSilver with black velvet panels down the front and across the sleeves
University of Illinois at Urbana–ChampaignIllinois Blue with two Illinois Orange chevronsAdmiral blue and Royal blue with orange trimRoyal blue octagonal tam or Admiral blue mortarboardUniversity's block "I" logo on left lapel
University of IowaBlack and GoldBlack with sleeve bars and Yellow Front PanelsBlack velvet octagonal tam
University of KentuckyBlue and WhiteKentucky Blue with Black trimUK logo with Memorial Hall
University of MarylandBlack with Gold ChevronScarlet and blackBlack 6 sided tamScarlet cross bottonyPanels, chevrons, and crosses bottony are trimmed with gold piping
University of Maryland Global CampusBlack with Gold and Red ChevronsRed and GoldBlack octagonal tamSeal of the University of Maryland University College
University of MiamiGreen and OrangeDark Green and BlackBlack TamGowns given by UM are black with blue stripes and a mortarboard. Doctoral gowns purchased are dark green and come with an eight sided tam.
University of MichiganMaize with blue chevronsBlack with velvet lining in color that varies based on subject of degree conferredBlack tam with tassel in color that varies based on subject of degree conferred
University of Nebraska–LincolnScarlet and creamBlack,
University of North Carolina at Chapel HillCarolina Blue with two white chevronsCarolina Blue with Royal Blue velvet and white pipingRoyal Blue 6 sided tamSeal of the University of North CarolinaBachelor's gowns are light blue with white velvet facings. Master's gowns are black.
University of North TexasGreen and White with green shellGreen gown, Black velvetBlack velvet six-pointed tam, gold bullion tassel medallion given to doctoral graduates. Baccalaureates wear a green gown. Masters graduates wear a black gown with green panels and hood lined in green and white.
University of Notre DameGoldRoyal and navy blue with gold trimRoyal blue octagonal tamUniversity shield in gold
University of OklahomaCrimson and creamBlack with crimson velvetBlack hexagonal tamnoneThe bachelor's and master's gowns include the OU Seal on the left chest.
University of PennsylvaniaRed with blue chevronRed and blueBlue hexagonal tamnone
University of RochesterYellowBlue Black and Yellow Velvet TrimBlue or black Hexagonal TamDandelion emblem on left
The University of Texas at AustinTraditional orange and whiteBurnt orangeSix-cornered velvet tamUT Tower in gold
University of VirginiaVaries by school or collegeNavy with navy velvet panels and orange trimNavy hexagonal tamStylized Rotunda logo
University of WashingtonPurplePurple with purple velvet panels and gold trimPurple hexagonal tamnoneAll doctoral robes and hoods are purple and gold, regardless of degree specifics.
University of Wisconsin–MadisonCardinal redBlack with red velvet panels and facings.Black octagonal tamUniversity logo
Valparaiso UniversityBrownBrown with Gold Tam
Vanderbilt UniversityAntique Gold with black chevronAntique Gold with black facingsBlack tamVanderbilt "V" markPhD graduates only wear the gold and black gown; professional doctorates wear a black gown with Vanderbilt "V" mark facing in gold.
Villanova UniversityBlue and whiteBlue hexagonal tamnone
Virginia TechMaroon with orange chevronBlack with maroon velvet lined with orangeMaroon hexagonal tamUniversity seal in light maroonBachelor and master gowns are black and has two flaps on each breast of the gown depicting the university shield and motto in maroon and orange. Traditional black doctoral gowns with black velvet facings and stripes are accepted.
Washington and Lee UniversityPurple with blue and white liningBlackBlack hexagonal tamnone
Washington University in St. LouisGreen with red chevronGreen with black velvet trimBlack hexagonal tamnoneUniversity shield on sleeves at shoulder; undergraduate gowns also green with shield
Wellesley CollegeDark blue
Yale UniversityBlueYale blue and blackBlack mortarboardnone