This marks the beginning of a new series of posts tracking the making of a Huntsman tweed shooting suit. A three-piece with plus-twos in one of this year’s house tweeds (above, right, and second from the left on the sleeves).

The tweed is a revival of one first made in 1968. Every two years Huntsman commissions a range of new tweeds from the 450-year-old Islay Woolen Mill in the Inner Hebrides, which resurrect an old design from the firm’s archives. (It has been using that mill for the past 12 years, ever since it was recommended by a client from San Francisco who stumbled across it while in Scotland.)

The pattern for the collection is taken from the old design, as are the colours for one tweed, while the background colours for the rest are standard browns, lovat, biscuit etc. The precise colour combinations are chosen by Hunstman staff (and occasionally clients) when they receive a large blanket from the mill covering 50-odd swatches (this series will feature a post on the new blanket when it arrives later in the year).

The mill receives guidance from general manager Peter Smith and his team. In the current collection, for example, Peter suggested a lot of lilac in the green tweed you can see on the model above. Despite that, and the rather unusual shade of blue, this tweed was one of the first to sell out. Then again, to retain their uniqueness only 60 metres of the tweeds are ordered each time – since some customers order a shooting suit with both plus-twos and trousers, that 60 metres doesn’t go very far.

To publicise the tweeds this year, Huntsman made up the lovely patched jacket you can see below, featuring tweeds from the 1960s to the present. Although it was only a showpiece for the window, they ended up selling four of the jackets – though some customers requested a little less pink here, a bit more blue there. It takes the idea of commissioning cloth to a whole new level.


The 2011/12 tweeds will revive the pattern from 1977 – the yellow with large twill you can see on the far right, centre, on the jacket above. Above that is a brown tweed with red check from 2001, to its left is a pink from 2004, going left still is a sparse check from 2008 and next to that is the 1968/2010 check with horizontal brown stripe I am having made.

There is also an 1980s check there, the orange and cream on the far left, centre. And below that is a grey check from 1999. It’s interesting to see how patterns and colours change over time, from the simple to the variegated, and which ones are considered suitable for the present day. Fashions come full circle.

I’m pleased with my tweed – I think the browns and blues will make it easy to wear casually with jeans or cords. And the brown background is slightly more modern than the greens or biscuit.

Next: Design and measuring

Photography: Andy Barnham

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Андрей

Simon, any chance to see full photo of the jacket from the bottom picture?

(By the way, is it a jacket or a field coat?)

Anonymous

Hi Simon–
You made a stunning choice! The ultra bold black verticals on a warm complex neutral is the most eye-popping of all tweeds shown. I can’t wait to see what is done with that pattern as it becomes incorporated into the cut of jacket. Sure as hell won’t be easy to work with. That’s where tailoring artistry (genius?) shows its stuff. What potential for a brilliant outcome!

As for patchwork anything: Interesting collection of patterns, but PLEASE!!! Leave it home the closet! Strictly a novelty. I’ve always hated that stuff — from Brooks Brothers yuppy madras to Ralph Lauren’s patchwork, echhhh!

Cheers!
–John Wesley

Anonymous

Great photos. Can’t wait to see how this develops.

NDD

Brandon

It looks very promising!

Anonymous

Hi, Great post.
The patch work jacket, what color pants would best match the jacket? With so many colors, would a dark brown work?
Just curious, I dont have or will buy a jacket like that..

Brian

I don’t know if you have ever made it to Islay Wool Mill, but it’s worth the trip if you can. My wife and I went to Islay (I’m a whisky fan) probably about the time Huntsman started using them. I’d never heard of them, but we saw an advert poster on the ferry and thought it would be a fun place to stop. The old machinery is amazing and the skill behind the workers (there are only a few) is great to see in person. I love their fabric so much we did our dining chairs in their tweed, we have an armchair in another, and I have a cutting of tweed that I am saving to have made into a blazer one of these days. It really is the type of place that feels like it is doing things the way it has for 100 years and that’s why it is of such a high quality.