The Friday Polo – next batch available

Avitabile-Friday-polo-shirt-navy (1)

  
The next batch of our Friday Polos, designed by myself and Neapolitan shirtmaker Luca Avitabile, are now available to order and be sent out. 

As we described in our first post on this collaboration, these long-sleeved polo shirts are cut long in the body (like a shirt) to make them ideal for wearing with tailoring.

They also have a classic, cutaway collar, a slightly slim fit, and are made of a beautiful mid-weight cotton piqué. The latter makes them ideal for wearing most of the year, under different weights of jacket. 

As the shirts have been available for pre-order for the past few weeks, stock on many is already running low – despite the 100-piece production run. The current stock is:

White: all sizes available
Navy: sold out in S, L and XL, one left in M
Grey: sold out 
Blue: all sizes available
Green: sold out

I particularly recommend the white and grey colours. Over the past few months I have found white to be particularly versatile, under either a navy or grey jacket, and grey to work well casually – avoiding any of the corporate or preppy associations of some other shirt colours.

Please note that we are only making the half-button style now, as per a classic polo shirt, as it was so much more popular than the full button-through. 

Those that have already pre-ordered their polo shirts will receive an email from me giving them payment details. All others wishing to make an order should email me at [email protected]. Each polo costs £145, and postage is £8 in Europe, £14 elsewhere in the world. 

You can see the five colours below: white, navy, grey, blue and racing green. The mother-of-pearl buttons look particularly nice against the white. 
  

Polo grey Polo whitePolo Green Polo Blue Polo Navy

  
I wear a medium, and have a 38-inch chest and 15-inch neck. The measurements for all the sizes are (in centimetres):

             Chest      Waist         Yoke        Sleeve         Body

S           102            92              40                  61                 75
M          106           96               44                  65                 76
L           116            106             47                  69                 81 
XL        124           114              48                  69                 81 
 
Other points:
  • Payment is through the Permanent Style site on credit card
  • Shipping is £8 in Europe and £14 elsewhere, with a small additional charge for each polo shirt after the first
  • I’m happy to accept returns, but can’t pay return postage
  • Any other questions please let me know

And on the product itself:

  • My key aim was a polo that worked well under tailoring
  • They are designed to be tucked in and so cut long, with tails like a shirt. This way they do not come out of the trousers and have a cleaner finish through the waist
  • They are pre-washed, so should not shrink. Do please wash on cool and line dry, however
  • They are made with a collar stand, in order to stand up and roll around a jacket collar, but also have rubber collarbones in case you want the collar to not roll and remain stiff
  • The material, from Caccioppoli, is one of the most important aspects. Previously I have had bespoke ones in both winter and summer weights, and neither have been quite right. The summer ones lack body and can be too transparent; the winter ones are too heavy to wear in the summer. This fabric is not only a beautiful quality, but is a mid-weight that (in England) could be worn three seasons of the year. On its own in summer, or in Spring or Autumn with a shawl-collar sweater over the top 

How great things age: Bespoke leather jacket

Bespoke leather jacket Davide Taub

  
The ‘How Great Things Age‘ series celebrates and examines how quality menswear ages over time. Often, it becomes more beautiful, though different materials from leather to cotton to board age in very different ways. 

The last two we featured – a Levi’s big-E jacket and a Barbour motorcycle jacket – were vintage items, rather than things I had aged myself through wearing. This instalment, then, is a return to more personal pieces – such as the Edward Green Oundles (the first quality pair of shoes I ever owned) and Globe-Trotter suitcase.

Regular readers will be familiar with this leather jacket, which was made bespoke for me by Davide Taub at Gieves & Hawkes. As well as being cut and fitted by hand, it had a padded, jacket-style shoulder which set it apart construction-wise from anything off the peg.

(There are six posts in total on that process, from initial watercolour sketch, through fittings in two different waste cloths, to details on the final piece. Click on the links to read more.)

It’s only been two years, but the jacket’s calf leather has darkened significantly, as I’d hoped it would. Veg-tanned leather will normally acquire a patina in this way, but without specific knowledge of the tannery or evidence of pieces made in its leather, it’s very hard to know exactly how it will age. 
  

Bespoke leather jacket Davide Taub GievesBespoke leather jacket Davide Taub Crompton

   
When we say patina, of course, we mean dirt. Leather builds up atmospheric dirt, and then darkens more in places where it comes into contact with dirty surfaces – the elbows, top of the back, bottom edge. Or indeed with your own skin, on the fold of the collar or the bottom of the zip.

As the whole skin settles into a darker tone, this ageing will slow down, but it will continue to change colour indefinitely. 

Such changes are particularly noticeable when there is some leather facing inside the jacket. This won’t age anywhere near as fast, and so you can see the change simply by folding back the cuff, as above. (As ever, click on the images to enlarge.)

A reader made the comment a while ago that the jacket’s cut makes it slightly more of a fashion piece. I agree: the bespoke cut is quite form fitting, and most leather blousons would use ribbing around the waist to keep it tight, expanding into a much more generous fit around the waist.

But this cut has more in common with motorcycle jackets, which of course were always cut close to reduce wind resistance and retain warmth. It doesn’t have an asymmetric zip, or quick-access external pockets, but the shape is very similar. 

That ageing is also now a big factor in how it looks. The blackness of the elbow and chest, as well as the wrinkled texturing everywhere, give a touch more ruggedness. 

Beautiful and more personal, certainly. And hopefully it will only get greater as it ages more.

(Polo shirts coming later this week by the way, for those waiting…)
 

Bespoke leather jacket Davide Taub waist

Bespoke leather jacket Davide Taub close up

How smart is my tie?

Tie textures and formality

  
A few weeks a reader asked for a post on what makes a tie more or less formal, smart or not.

It’s a very relevant question. Few men today wear ties, but when they do, they rarely want them to be as smart as the traditional foulards and Macclesfield weaves. Understanding how to dress down a tie (or, for the right occasion, up) is important.
  

The four elements

The elements that make a tie more or less formal are very similar to those that affect suits, shoes or handkerchiefs. Brighter colours and bolder patterns are less smart; smooth texture and dark tones are more.

Just like a strongly patterned, woollen jacket is less formal than a plain suit in smooth worsted, so a cashmere tie with a big club stripe is less formal than a navy repp.

The four dominant elements here are: tone, colour, texture and pattern. Of these, texture is often the most important in a tie – partly because it is the most subtle and easy to miss.

In the image at the top of this post, I have shown five ties that have greater texture from left to right. They are: printed silk, woven silk, grenadine, tussah and knitted silk.
 

Screen Shot 2015-09-24 at 14.09.08

 
All things being even, they would therefore go from more to less formal, left to right.

The first two have a pattern, however, which sets them apart, and are slightly different shades of blue. The printed silk (left) has a slightly larger pattern (less formal) but is a darker shade of blue (more formal).

The difference between these two is tiny, but the important thing to realise is that all three things – texture, pattern, colour – make a difference as well as texture.

If there were to be an order to the different textures, it would look something like:

  1. Satin
  2. Printed silk
  3. Woven silk
  4. Grenadine
  5. Tussah
  6. Knitted silk
  7. Most wools and linens
  8. Shantung

[I am mixing up different terms for the sake of clarity and brevity. Some of these are also weaves, of course, and I’m omitting types of weave as well as types of grenadine.]

You could argue about the list, but it’s essentially an objective judgment of the same thing: how textured, how smooth or not, is the material? This is largely important because it affects the way light is absorbed or reflected.
  

Formality in diagrammatic form

Below is a diagram showing pattern together with the three other elements – tone, colour, texture and pattern – that should be considered.
  

Tie formality

  
Again, there are things we’re leaving out here, such as finishes on the silk or wool/cotton, but the same principles generally apply.

An important point on pattern is that it matters both how big it is, and how fancy. So a club stripe is a large, dominant pattern; but it’s simplicity makes it relatively formal. A paisley, on the other hand, is usually quite informal even at a lower scale.

Deciding whether two ties with widely different readings on these scales is largely pointless. Is a (muted) pink tie with a large (but simple) pattern smarter than a (strong) blue tie with a (small) fancy pattern? It doesn’t really matter.

The important thing is that if you want to know which tie to wear to a formal event and which informal, you have four elements to consider.

A satin tie is often great for an evening event because of its sheen (but is smarter in navy than in yellow). A grenadine, in navy or black, is perhaps the most versatile of all ties because its texture sits in the middle of the spectrum.

Reader (I think you were anonymous) I hope that helps.

All ties from Drakes

My vintage leather folio: How great things age

vintage folio case laptop

  
I bought this vintage folio from Bentleys Antiques in London last year, and it has proved fantastically useful. 

We can all count ourselves lucky that laptops (well, MacBooks anyway) are only a touch bigger than European writing paper in the first half of the twentieth century. It means vintage cases like this one can still be used today. 

Along with the MacBook Air I tend to carry a phone, wallet, keys, business cards, phone and notebook. Plus assorted papers. This case can hold all of them, with several of the pockets also conveniently sized.
   

vintage folio case leather

vintage folio case mens    

The biggest problem with vintage cases is speed of access. A gentleman in the 1920s never had to dive into his case to answer a call, fish out his wallet or drop in a leaflet. He would arrive, sit, and only then open his case. Pieces like this would usually contain writing equipment, which would always require a desk. 

Modern cases usually have some form of external pocket, and it is often the one most heavily used. The classic attache case suffers from the same problem – it has to laid down on a surface to access the contents, which is not helpful when you are trying to dig out a map or grab your keys. 
  

vintage folio case leather2

vintage folio case2

  
However, for a vintage piece this folio is actually quite easy to use. It can be opened at the top when held, as shown, giving access to a deep, full-width pocket. It is here that quick-access items can be stored, while the laptop and anything else can be contained in the other two, folded sections. 

The leather is a heavily waxed calf on the outside, and goatskin on the inside. It has a lot of spotting on the exterior, but I like such signs of age if they don’t affect the functionality.

If I could change one element, it would be the hardware, which might be nicer in brass. 
  

vintage folio case bentleys

  
Photos: Jamie Ferguson – www.jkfman.com and @jkf_man

Post on the clothes in these photos here

Sheep return to Savile Row!

Screen Shot 2015-09-21 at 13.40.46

  
In two weeks’ time, on Monday October 5th, there will be a reprise of Sheep On The Row – the event that five years ago saw the Row carpeted in grass and covered in sheep. 

You can see coverage of that previous event here. It was a wonderful atmosphere. Sheep strolled peacefully, bespoke-clad shepherds tended casually to them, and all the bespoke houses had work on display – with their front doors open. 

The format will be similar this year. There will be two sheds at either end of the grass, housing information on the major sheep-growing regions. There will be two flocks of sheep on display, Bowmont Merino and Exmoor. And 25 tailoring houses are making special pieces to be displayed on models, in cloths of different mills. (It will be the biggest group of tailors ever to put their work on display at the same time.)
  

Savile Row Field Day

  
The event is open to anyone to come along, though be warned GQ will be roving about taking street-style photos. It runs from 10am to 6pm and marks the beginning of Wool Week in the UK.

For any young tailors and apprentices out there, a photo shoot is also being organised for the morning of the 5th, around the postbox on the corner of Burlington Gardens. Intended to celebrate the wealth of new talent coming into the industry, it is open to anyone to come along. Email [email protected] for more information. 

(I can’t believe it was five years ago. And I had hair back then!)
 

Savile Row Field Day with Derek and Sunna

Steven Hitchcock fitting: Let the tailor cut his style

Steven Hitchcock bespoke jacket basted fitting

  
I return to the drape style with recognisable regularity. For those without a big chest – and not that bothered about big, wide shoulders – it is a very flattering shape. Many also forget how slim it is usually cut through the waist, enhancing the contrast with the chest.

But I wasn’t going to talk about drape. I was going to use this excuse of a fitting with Steven Hitchcock on a new jacket – in a beautiful grey from the W Bill Lamlana bunch, which mixes lambswool and angora – to talk about the customer’s interaction with his tailor. 
  

Steven Hitchcock bespoke jacket2

Steven Hitchcock bespoke jacket savile row

  
Men that are new to bespoke are often thrown by the number of options: width of trouser, length of sleeve, number of buttons. Unfortunately, some react by trying to learn about every single aspect of the suit, and then dictate to the tailor. 

This is rarely a good idea. Almost every man I know that has suits from multiple tailors ends up coming to the same conclusion: just let the tailor cut their style. 

Don’t get an English tailor to cut a Neapolitan jacket. Distrust any tailor that says they can cut in every style. And don’t start moving around buttoning points, lapel rolls and pockets. 

I’ve made all these mistakes in the past – the English/Neapolitan one, the tailor in any style one, removing structure from a structured jacket, removing drape from a draped jacket, perhaps worst of all trying to make a traditional jacket ‘younger’. 

Just because there are so many variables in bespoke, it doesn’t mean you should change them. You may get 8 out of 10 right, but not 10. The Florentine tailor, on the other hand, would have cut a perfect Florentine jacket. 
  

Steven Hitchcock bespoke jacket fittings

   
This same lesson goes for behaviour in a fitting room. For a start, leave the basted fitting to the tailor; it’s about balance, not style; just stand there and answer if asked. Then, at the forward fitting, only consider the options that are obviously questions of personal taste. The obvious ones are sleeve length, trouser length and perhaps trouser width. 

Some bespoke customers seem to be under the bizarre impression that tailors are trying to deceive them. That if they don’t come in armed with requirements for every aspect of the suit, the tailor will screw them over. 

They won’t. The tailor will simply cut to his style and taste. And if you don’t like his style and taste, you shouldn’t be using this tailor. 

Others seem to be under the impression that they know more than their tailor. You may know more about international styles, but you don’t know more about how to cut his style that he does. And again, if you know more than your tailor, you shouldn’t be using him.*

I mention all this, of course, because it occurred to me how few choices I made with this jacket from Steven. We have made a jacket before of course, so that helps. But all I really had to do was select cloth and buttons, the number of breasts and buttons, and confirm Steven’s assumptions about my sleeve length. 

Steven cuts a damn good jacket. I know his style and I came to him because I like his style. That’s it. 

It’s also nice to see Steven and Celia settling into the premises on George Street. As soon as you walk in you can see them working away at the back, with Steven often preparing his own bastes (as he usually prefers to do). There are other tailors in the building, of course, but the downstairs area feels like Steven’s pad, and it suits him to have one.
  

Steven Hitchcock bespoke jacket lamlana

Steven Hitchcock bespoke jacket fitting

Steven Hitchcock bespoke jacket

  
Steven is, by the way, in the US in a couple of weeks, and will be in Boston for the first time. Do give him a warm welcome. 

Details: 

  • New York: Sunday 4th to Tuesday 6th October (until noon), The Benjamin Hotel
  • Boston: Wednesday 7th to Thursday 8th October, The Eliot Hotel
  • Contact +0207 287 2492 and [email protected] 

*The only possible exception is a very limited access to tailors, which means you’re stuck with him. 

Photos: Jack Lawson

Launch party: The Finest Menswear in the World

Finest menswear in the world book signing

simon crompton Finest menswear in the world

  
It was lovely to see so many people on Wednesday night at our launch party for The Finest Menswear in the World

Nearly everyone made it, despite the torrential rain, the taxi strikes and the underground closures. Cleverley and Anderson & Sheppard did a wonderful job of hosting us, with a window display of their products, alongside Drake’s ties and my two books – The Finest Menswear in the World and Permanent Style 2015
  

Finest menswear in the world party

Finest menswear in the world signature

balvenie whisky Finest menswear in the world

  
And then people began queuing for signatures. I’m sorry I didn’t have much time to speak to everyone. I think it was almost three hours in the end of solid signing and greeting, so apologies (particularly to all the readers) that we couldn’t chat for long. 

Thanks to to Cifonelli for coming over, Begg and all the others included in the book. Also to Balvenie for some wonderful whisky and Charbonnel & Walker for the chocolates. 

For those that couldn’t make it, don’t worry there will be more events before Christmas. 
  

Pat Murphy of Davies and Son
Pat Murphy of Davies & Son
audie charles and tom stubbs Finest menswear in the world
Audie Charles of Anderson & Sheppard, and Tom Stubbs
Finest Menswear Launch Sylvester London Undercover
With Tony Sylvester of London Undercover and Cyana Madsen of Nigel Cabourn
Lorenzo Cifonelli at Permanent Style launch
Lorenzo Cifonelli
Mats Klingberg of Trunk
Mats Klingberg of Trunk
simon crompton and michael hill Finest menswear in the world
With Michael Hill of Drake’s
sarah murray the rake Finest menswear in the world
Sarah Murray of The Rake

  
Thank you again, everyone. The Finest Menswear in the World is still available for dedicated versions by emailing me, and Permanent Style 2015 is also available

Photos: Jamie Ferguson – www.jkfman.com and @jkf_man

Finest menswear in the world royal arcade

George Glasgow Sr

Finest Menswear in the World launch

Finest Menswear

Finest menswear in the world

Finest Menswear2

Permanent Style 2015 book

Finest Menswear5

Balvenie whisky at launch

Finest Menswear4

Milan: A sartorial city guide

milan via dell spiga

  
Milan is the centre of the men’s fashion industry, yet as far as style is concerned, there are surprisingly few shops worth visiting.

Via Montenapoleone, Via Della Spiga and the roads that run between them are all pleasant places to stroll. But the shops are 90% fashion houses with the same offerings as any other major city. 

In these guides we’ve tried to avoid such cookie-cutter chains. They’re certainly no part of the joy of travelling. As a reminder, here are the ground rules, established in the first sartorial guide (to London):

  • These are guides to quality. Only top shops with well-made products are included
  • The guides only cover menswear, and largely sartorial menswear
  • Most importantly, they only cover shopping experiences that are pretty much exclusive to the city. (There are fewer and fewer of these, and they should be celebrated.)

With that out of the way, let’s run through where to go if you ever find yourself in Milan.
  

1. Al Bazar
www.albazarmilano.it
Via Antonio Scarpa, 9

Top of the list not for its taste, which isn’t always perfect (eg over-coloured double monks) but for the originality of the male clothing in a town sadly lacking it. Tailoring in original cloths, nicely made polo shirts, and some great knitwear.

2. M Bardelli
www.mbardelli.com
Corso Magenta, 13

Perhaps the best traditional menswear store in Milan. Originally started as a hat business in the 1940s, it has a great range of classic, beautifully made, luxurious clothing. Particularly good on accessories and knitwear.

3. Tincati
tincatimilano.it
Via Gesu’, 7

Although it has branches in a few other major cities, Tincati is a Milanese shop with a bigger range at home and a strong local following. It is strong on tailoring, but also has casualwear, knitwear and accessories. Slightly brighter and holder than standard Milanese fare.

4. Tailors: Ferdinando Caraceni, A Caraceni, Musella-Dembech
www.caracenitailor.com; caracenimilano.comwww.muselladembechmilano.com 
Via S. Marco, 22; Via Fatebenefratelli, 16; Via Celestino IV, 9

There are, thankfully, still some great bespoke tailors in Milan, with the two Caracenis (Ferdinando and A, for Augusto) on top of the pile. All are friendly and welcome people to drop by, but still best to make an appointment. If you’re set on bespoke, also worth checking out Musella-Dembech and Sartoria Pecora among others.


5. Rivolta
www.calzoleriarivolta.com
Via della Spiga, 17

At Rivolta there are shoes made to very high standard (hand-sewn welts) and a bespoke service that attempts to use a digital scanner to model the foot. My experiences with the latter weren’t great, but I’m told they have refined the process. Classic designs with a good range of exotics; made by a third party.

6. Caruso, Uman
www.carusomenswear.com; www.umanconcept.com
Via Gesù, 4; Via Gesù, 10

Caruso is a top-class tailoring factory that has expanded in recent years with its own line of ready-to-wear. Although shops are opening slowly around the world, this opera-themed store is worth a visit both for the stock and the interior decoration. The company also has a cousin, Uman, around the corner. Both are part of the project to turn Via Gesu into a dedicated menswear street.

7. Siniscalchi
www.siniscalchicamiciesumisura.com
Via Carlo Porta, 1

The best known of the Milanese shirtmakers, north of the centre. A nice, if formal make (floating lining in the collars) and extraordinarily expensive prices. Other shirt makers include Evgeniya Kiyan, Camiceria Barone and Alessandra Passeri.

8. Rubinacci
www.marianorubinacci.net
Via del Gesù, 1

Rubinacci has stores elsewhere, of course, and is not from Milan. But the new shop off Montenapoleone is worth a visit, if only because there is such a strong range of accessories and some strong ready-to-wear.

9. Bigi
www.bigicravatte.it
Viale Gian Galeazzo, 16

The tiemaker Bigi opened a small retail section in its central-Milan workshop recently, where visitors can see both the ready-made ties and commission bespoke ones. A hidden gem in a city like Milan.

10. Etro perfumes and discount store
www.etro.com
Via Spartaco, 6; Via Verri, ang. Via Bigli

A big fashion brand with a lot of similar shops, but there is only one Etro store dedicated to its fragrances, and only one discount store.

11. Armani
www.armani.com
Via Alessandro Manzoni, 31

If you do want to visit any fashion brands, the massive block of real estate taken up by Giorgio Armani is the one place not to miss. An experience, whether you love it or hate it.

Many thanks to all the Milanese (and Italians generally) that contributed their views on this list. Alessandro, Alessandra, Antonio, you know who you are.

Updates: Polo shirts, book orders

Friday polo shirt

  
God, there’s so much going on I feel like I need one of these posts every week. 

Thank you to everyone that has emailed asking about the dedicated copies of The Finest Menswear in the World. There has been a slight delay getting these from the warehouse, but we should have them all next week. I will be in contact with everyone by email about payment as they come in. 

The books will also be available at our launch party tomorrow, and I will be there to sign or dedicate copies. So do come and get one there if you want. 

Thank you also to those asking about our Friday Polo shirts, which we introduced with Luca Avitabile back in July. The second run of these will be available on September 28, in two weeks’ time. The same range of colours will be available as before, although we are only doing the half-button style as it was so much more popular than the button-through. 

If you’d like to ensure you don’t miss out on the polo shirts, you can pre-order any time by emailing me

Thanks, and see everyone tomorrow at the launch.

Simone Abbarchi shirt fitting

Simone Abbarchi bespoke shirt

  
When I brought my shirt from Simone Abbarchi back to him in June (or rather his assistant, Gianluca) we ended up making quite a few changes. This may be a cause for concern, though I will reserve judgment. 

I had had one fitting originally, in a trial shirt, before having this final grey one made. And as I said in the post on that completed shirt, the shoulders were noticeably too tight while the body was a bit too big. 

Neither were big problems, but they certainly needed to change for the next shirt, so I went in while at Pitti in June to have a few changes made to the pattern. Gianluca took quite a lot in at the waist, lengthened the sleeves slightly, and widened the shoulders. In retrospect, they were quite substantial alterations. 
  

Simone Abbarchi bespoke shirt fitting2

Simone Abbarchi bespoke shirt fitting

  
Why is this important? Because the aim of anyone seeing a shirt maker should be to perfect a pattern – usually after two or even three shirts, rarely after one – and then be able to order consistently and with confidence.

Shirts should be a relatively inexpensive purchase, compared to suits or shoes, and they will need replacing more frequently. You are also much less likely to need or want different styles, again unlike suits or shoes. So one good shirtmaker with a great pattern is a lovely thing. 

Of course, being me I actually use three shirtmakers (D’Avino, Luca Avitabile and Abbarchi) depending on how flush I am feeling at the time. They all offer good value for what they do, and each will suit a different pocket. [See this post for more details.]

Simone comes to London and New York twice a year, and both trips are coming up. He is London next week – September 15 and 16 – at 35-36 St James’s Place. And in New York from October 7th to 15th at the Michelangelo Hotel (152 W 51st St). Email [email protected] for appointments.
  

Simone Abbarchi bespoke shirt fitting Florence

I am not a gentleman

perfumes-masculinos-que-fazem-o-maior-sucesso-8

  
I am not a gentleman. Or if I am, it has nothing whatever to do with what I wear.

I get increasingly frustrated with the peddling of the idea of the ‘gentleman’ as a vehicle to sell tailoring. Everywhere you go, fashion brands push this bizarre association, usually accompanied by images of confident, laughing men in tuxedos.

There is no necessary connection between what a man wears and his gentility.

Gentility can imply a refinement in many things, from manners, to morality to culture. It may also involve a refinement in clothing – but it does not have to. And the idea that smart clothing directly suggests something  about a man’s ethics is absurd.

This would all be pretty funny, if it wasn’t so depressingly ubiquitous.

In menswear magazines around the world, we are presented with the same images of brooding men, sipping whisky, puffing cigars, surrounded in a cheap and frankly misogynistic way by submissive women.

In fact, that might be the worst aspect of it all. For the lifestyle, the morality and the culture we are presented with are deeply suspect. To be a gentleman, we are told, is to be a rich, famous, womanising drunk.

Where is the celebration of other aspects of life? Physical achievement, as seen in stamina and suffering. Or the creativity and originality of intellectual achievement, . 

It may turn out that refinement in life is best encapsulated by a yoga teacher with a wife and two kids, who cycles to work. But of course that would sell fewer sports cars.

If I see another perfume ad where a smirking man walks away from a prone woman on a bed, puts on his shirt in slow motion, and sips a drink while staring out of his balcony window, I will shoot someone.

Please, let’s have enough of this celebration of shallow pleasures and hollow conquests.

Life is a lot more interesting.

Rubinacci linen suit – on Wei

Wei Koh linen

  
A couple of weeks ago when we showed the pictures from our Tailoring Symposium at Pitti, a reader asked if there were any images of Wei Koh’s suit.

I had mentioned that the founder of The Rake was wearing a Rubinacci-made number in the same Scabal linen as my Sastreria Langa
  
Wei Koh in Rubinacci linen suit2

Wei Koh linen suit

 
Here a couple, from the poolside discussion and the group shot afterwards. Obviously Wei’s style is not mine, but the fit and finish of the suit were excellent.
  

Wei Koh in Rubinacci linen suit

Wei Koh

Updates: Robert Noble, tote bag, book launch…

Screen Shot 2015-09-07 at 15.34.55

  
First off, a quick update on the situation with the Robert Noble mill – as readers seemed quite interested in news of the closing down of the historic site in Peebles.

As suggested then, the Robert Noble name, designs and some staff (including sales head Alistair McDade and design head Elspeth Anderson) have been bought by Magee Weaving in Ireland. Magee is an old name (1866) for weaving in Donegal, and mostly weaves for the womenswear industry. Hopefully it should be a good fit. 

In other updates, thank you all for orders on the Tote Bag. Orders on this will close tomorrow, but can be made on the Globe-Trotter site now – here

We also have about 15 places left for the book launch of the Finest Menswear in the World, which is next Wednesday in the Royal Arcade, London. Cleverley have the whisky coming, A&S the food, and there will be books available to be bought and signed. Please do come along. 

Thanks all for pre-orders on the polo shirts. They should be ready in about two weeks’ time. 

And finally, someone asked recently about Permanent Style 2015 – the best-of-the-blog book we published earlier in the year. This is still available, and can be bought here. Remember that you can get local shipping in the US or UK (where I know most readers are); just make sure to select that as your country. 

Checked jackets and accessories

Solito jacket black knit tie

  
This was taken during a recent photo shoot for Plaza Uomo magazine in Sweden.

I think the only time I have shown the jacket before I wore it open-necked (blue shirt and navy crew neck, with charcoal trousers). It is not an easy pattern to accessorise, though one tie colour that certainly goes is black, going off the colour of the check itself.

Looking for such minor colours in the pattern or weave of a jacket is a good place to look for potential accessories. Sometimes it is more obvious – as here – and other times – as with the weave of my Rubinacci donegal, you have to look a little closer.

It’s particularly worth looking for black in trouser cloth, as large sections of black in a twill or houndstooth will often restrict it to being worn with black shoes. Brown just won’t look right, but the reason won’t be obvious.
 

140A1937 copy 2

  
The jacket cloth is from the old Caccioppoli A/W bunch. It was not my first choice – I remember I originally wanted a grey with a brown overcheck that sat next to it, but it was sold out. In retrospect this was the more interesting choice, however.

That grey/brown check would have sat much better with brown shoes and paler trousers, and this one requires blacks, charcoals and dark navy. But once you have learned how to wear something it’s no harder to put together. I’ve learnt that the trousers have to be a relatively strong colour for instance, such as the khaki here. 

Interestingly, as with many checks this one is brought alive by its overcheck. The vibrant orange brings the pattern together, lifting the otherwise potentially turgid black and green. 

Handkercheif folded square and then stuffed casually, as I like it. One point appears to have twisted downwards, which is a nice accident (or is it?). Vintage folio as featured before, briefly. I’ll write a separate post on that next week.  
  

140A1937 copy

  
Photography: Jamie Ferguson

Luca and Luigi in New York

Luca Avitabile shirts bespoke

  
New York will be getting its first visit from shirtmaker Luca Avitabile and tailor Luigi Solito in a couple of weeks, which I know will be welcome news for readers that have watched their pieces on PS for the past couple of years. 

Details are below on the invite. Luca is asking for a minimum order of four shirts for a new customer, which hopefully readers will understand. Most artisans like Luigi and Luca still lose money on the first few trips, so its a long-term relationship that both are trying to build. They will be back in New York in December.
 

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More importantly for me, they will also be in London next week, the 10th to the 12th. I’m sure I’ll see some of you there, as per normal. 

For anyone that is new to these guys, you can see my posts on them here:

Gennaro Solito and Luigi Solito

Solito bespoke tailoring

Exquisite Trimmings and Monsieur Fox trunk show

instagramtrunkshow3

 
There’s an interesting trunk show next week in London. Online stores Exquisite Trimmings and Monsieur Fox are combining to organise a show that will feature several of the brands they sell, plus some artisans. 

The show takes place from Sunday to Tuesday, September 6th-8th, at the Belgraves Hotel. 

On Sunday there will be representatives from Thomas Riemer, Polish tailor Zaremba, Codis Maya, EG Cappelli and Tie Your Tie. There will also be a drinks event that evening, in order to socialise with all the makers. 

Bespoke or made-to-order options will be available from those brands on the Sunday, and ready-made the other days. Fabio Attanasio from The Bespoke Dudes will be there on the Tuesday, offering his sunglasses, and they will be selling the Permanent Style 2015 book

The full list of brands is:

  • Monsieur Fox
  • EG Cappelli
  • The Bespoke Dudes Eyewear 
  • Tie Your Tie
  • Zaremba bespoke
  • Thomas Riemer gloves
  • Troubadour bags
  • Codis Maya
  • Exquisite Trimmings

And the full details are:

  • September 6th-8th
  • 11am-8pm
  • Belgraves Hotel, 20 Chesham Place
  • RSVP for the event here

Stile Latino – from Vincenzo Attolini

Vincenzo Attolini Stile Latino

  
I interviewed Vincenzo Attolini (above) back in January. This post is therefore a little late, although the advantage is the clothes will be dropping into shops now, unlike other pieces from trade shows where you have to wait at least six months to be able to buy anything.

In the picture above he is scrutinising the work on my Cifonelli DB jacket. He found it quite fascinating.
 

Stile Latino tailoring

 
Vincenzo Attolini sells ready-made and made-to-order tailoring under his brand Stile Latino. It is made in Naples and has a distinctive southern Italian softness. The default is no shoulder pad – there may be one, but only on a slightly more formal jacket. 

The style is younger than the more famous brand, Attolini, run by Vincenzo’s brothers Massimiliano and Giuseppe. (Vincenzo split off 10 years ago.)

The colours of Stile Latino are stronger, the cuts are tighter, and the jackets are shorter. There is also more emphasis on texture, with a surfeit of shantung ties and casentino coats. Nothing outlandish for those of us used to buying sartorial clothing, but definitely with an accent on youth. In Vincenzo’s words: “It must be sexy, it must be tight!” 

I can see that description putting off some readers immediately. Certainly, Stile Latino won’t be to the taste of traditional bespoke customers. But there may be a market among younger readers for whom bespoke Neapolitan tailoring is the most formal thing they would ever wear – and the rest of the time want something with a distinctly Italian style, and a strong quality level. 
 

Vincenzo Attolini Stile Latino2

  
For one thing Vincenzo is keen on is quality. Despite being a younger-orientated brand, he doesn’t spend any less on materials than his siblings, or on trimmings – canvas, melton and so on.

Indeed, for him this is where many of the Neapolitan brands have gone wrong in the past 50 years. “My grandfather [also Vincenzo Attolini, the founder of the Neapolitan style of tailoring] stripped down the traditional English suit. He took out the heavy canvas, the heavy shoulder pad, and made it shorter and closer fitting.

“But he still left the fundamentals there. There was always some form of shoulder pad, and a linen chest canvas if not a horsehair one. The mistake many Neapolitan companies have made is that they strip out everything, all padding and all canvas.

“This can make a jacket very shapeless. The only way to get away with that is to have a heavier material – in an overcoat, for example. And in any case you have to cut the jacket closer as you take out the structure. It has to use the body more.”

Not everyone would agree that a lighter-structured jacket has to fit closer to the body, but he’s certainly right that many RTW Italian brands skimp on the canvas, creating pretty shapeless garments.
 

Stile Latino overcoat on Simon Crompton

  
Interestingly, Vincenzo is forthright in only using handwork that he thinks is worth the money. He doesn’t use hand-sewn buttonholes, for example, because he considers that the vast majority of hand-sewn buttonholes in Naples look worse than the best machine-sewn ones (he may have a point there).

The problem with quality materials, and a good-sized collection, is that Stile Latino is expensive. Suits are around €2600, with an extra 20% for made to measure.

This might be the biggest issue. At that price many with access to a Neapolitan tailor will end up going bespoke. And those looking for the style ready-to-wear might go for cheaper brands like Eidos Napoli or Sartoria Formosa.

Vincenzo did offer to make me a jacket and overcoat made-to-measure, in order to demonstrate the value of that service. So we’ll have first hand experience soon.
 

Stile Latino

 
Stockists (not available on the Stile Latino site): 

EUROPE

  • OGER – Amsterdam
  • PAUW – Amsterdam
  • VAN DIJK – Waalwijk
  • DEGAND – Brussels
  • NITZ – Brussels
  • VERDI – Antwerp
  • BRAUN – Hamburg
  • MOELLER & SCHAAR – Frankfurt
  • DIEHL & DIEHL – Frankfurt
  • UNUTZER – Munich
  • LODENFREY – Munich
  • WEINBERG – Zurich
  • CARIOCA – Geneva

USA

  • AXEL’S – Colorado
  • GEORGE BASS – New Orleans
  • HEIDLIGH’S – Dallas
  • COWELL – Denver

JAPAN 

  • BEAMS
  • ISETAN
  • UNITED ARROWS

KOREA

  • LANSMERE
  • SHINSEGAE

ITALY

  • PUPI SOLARI – Milan
      

Stile Latino 3