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Thanks Noel. Yes that's the reason with the last point. On sizing, I actually found the Bryceland's slimmer - I wear a 42 now. But it does have a little shrinkage, where the Rubato doesn't seem to so far
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Read the commentsNo problem. No, a bespoke shirt maker would always do some kind of fitting on a first shirt with a customer. They wouldn't just send it to you after measurements
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Read the commentsThanks Jon, and yes I can see that on that kind of honest discussion
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Read the commentsThanks for your help, that's all great to know. It's an Australian summer (if mild by our standards), so thanks for the tips!
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I have to agree with you on that! The button above looks great, much better than the button my tailor (Italian) offers…
How could you actually recognize if a button is real horn?
A few ways, but most obviously the alternatives all have the same variegation or pattern on them. If you’re making thousands of plastic buttons, you don’t bother to make each one unique.
Could you please recommend some great sources for horn buttons with two holes and two grooves? I much prefer their look above four-holed models.
Show us the corresponding hand-sewn buttonhole, and the whole affair will begin to get somewhat erotic…
Very aubergine…