Bespoke washable jacket from Whitcomb & Shaftesbury: Review

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This is the second article on my washable bespoke cotton jacket pictured above, made by Whitcomb & Shaftesbury. For information on why a washable jacket is unusual, and how this one has worn and washed so far, see that article. Today’s is a review of the jacket itself, excluding the washability. 

A tailored cotton jacket is great. Its style makes it formal, but its material makes it casual. It’s hard wearing and functional, yet it can dress up a T-shirt and jeans. 

Linen is nice too, and my slubby linen DB has many of the same attributes. But you can really beat up a cotton jacket – plunge your hands in the hip pockets, overload the other pockets, chuck it in a bag, sleep in it in the corner of a carriage – and a good one will look all the better for it. 

Linen isn’t quite as tough, and a summer cotton jacket is more like a warm-weather equivalent of tweed or corduroy in that way. It’s also easy to repair, even patch. 

Perhaps most importantly, it makes fine tailoring more approachable. 

If I have one ongoing battle on Permanent Style, it’s finding and showing ways in which fine tailoring can be modern and relevant, not fussy or antiquated. A bespoke cotton jacket that fits beautifully, but looks like you have actually slept in it, is a great way to do that. 

I’ve had cotton suits over the years, but few cotton jackets. One reason is the material - the 9oz (255g) twill that’s standard for suitings can make a very nice suit but it’s a little flimsy for a knockabout jacket. 

There are heavier cottons, mostly sold for trousers, but they are usually too stiff to be comfortable as a jacket. There’s also moleskin and corduroy, but those are more for winter.

Musella Dembech suit in 9oz tailoring cotton
Ciardi suit in heavy, and too stiff, tailoring cotton

Whitcomb & Shaftesbury sourced a Japanese cotton* to make this jacket - or rather, sourced it for another customer, which I then saw and asked to make something similar. 

It’s only a little heavier than those twills I used in the past, at 300g, but it’s not made like a traditional tailoring cotton. It’s coarser, and denser, which makes it casual and tougher. I also find the density means it stands away from the body, making it cooler. 

This type of cotton is not generally used for tailoring partly because it can’t be worked - tailored - to the same extent. But Whitcomb did an admirable job shaping it, creating a nice bespoke fit despite also not having any canvas or padding

I did simplify the design from the other customer’s jacket. He was after a more traditional safari-jacket look, with tabs, epaulettes and so on. I wanted something stripped back and simpler, with that same aim of being subtle and easier to wear.

In fact, I only went with the inverted pleats you can see on the pockets at the last minute. I’m glad I did, as they’re a lovely detail and don’t make the jacket look that fussy. But my lesson from experiments in the past had always been to go simpler, whenever I’m in doubt. 

The edges of those pleats are lovely, betraying their handmade nature in a very subtle way, particularly as I’ve washed the jacket

These handmade details stand out everywhere on a bespoke cotton suit, as I’ve discussed in the past. Some of them include:

  • the pick stitching, clearly not the AMF-machine-fake style you get on ready-made jackets
  • the hand-sewn buttonholes that stand out more for being on a stiff material
  • the stitching on the inside of the sleeve that you can see coming through around the cuff 
  • the hand-attached collar that’s visible when you pop the collar 
  • one just for bespoke nerds: the cut used in the upper chest to give me some shape in the chest, in the absence of hand padding

I did get one or two style things wrong though. 

In retrospect I would have had the gorge lower on the lapel - I’m not sure how I missed that in the fitting process, as these days I’d always go lower. Although it doesn’t matter too much as I wear the collar more up than down. 

And we should have checked the functionality of the collar latch. It’s a nice detail, tucked away and buttoned back, and I’ll never use it. But it would still have been nice if it could fasten across the neck comfortably, and it’s a bit high to do that. 

In terms of how I’ve found I wear the jacket, it’s exactly what I hoped - with a shirt and tailored trousers but also with jeans and T-shirt. 

As per usual, I’ve shot in here with both to illustrate. The thing that makes the jacket particularly easy to wear with jeans is that the collar rolls open nicely when popped up. Bespoke jackets often don’t do that naturally, because they have more structure. 

It’s neater with the T-shirt tucked in (but blousing out a little) and interestingly I quite like the jacket buttoned to the top of the three buttons, more as I would a chore jacket. 

The tailored combination is in my now very standard palette of cream, brown and black (I first fell in love with that combination during this shoot six years ago I think). 

This is a fairly plain version of it, but it’s enlivened by the pop of colour from the orange-tinted lenses in the sunglasses, and the snuff-suede colour of the Métier tote

The trousers can be fairly smart - high twists or linens, as here - but the shirt has to be fairly casual. Something in a denim or chambray, or a lightweight cotton like this one, and preferably a soft collar. 

This jacket cost £2400 including VAT from Whitcomb & Shaftesbury, made bespoke. Other colours available in the same material include black, navy, olive and beige. 

Clothes pictured:

*The cotton is not usually available to buy by the cut length, as the mill does not usually serve tailors. Whitcomb buys it by the roll, in the same way as it does for its chinos. 

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22 Comments
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Richard

This looks great but choice of color is a little distinctive for me in this type of fabric. To me it would be more versatile in an earth-colored cloth that you could wear every day, but you seem to enjoy cream. BTW this was a really interesting project and shows the continued relevance of bespoke in today’s dressed-down world.

That Alex

Really like that. I’m quite envious. It certainly succeeds in being modern and relevant rather than antiquated.
On that topic, I see you wear a lot of jackets with non-matching tailored trousers, sometimes even with ties. It always looks good in the photos, but in real life this feels very antiquated to me. No one really dresses like that now and as such I feel it must stand out in a way a suit doesn’t. Surely no one who isn’t a clothing nut wears grey flannel trousers these days. Interested to hear why you clearly see this differently from me.

Rob

Small typo “Whitcomb buys is by the roll“, I think you want “it” for “is” there.

Manuel

Two questions: Would it be possible to add a washable tailored trouser, so it could also be worn as a suit? And is the price for the Indian bespoke?

AJ

Love this idea.

I wonder about your choice of color though. You mention copying a cloth from another customer. Also you mention the fraying and discoloring on the edges. Wouldn’t these effects be stronger on a blue, grey or brown? Have you considered using another color?

Tim J

Hey Simon, I know I mentioned that I loved the cotton jacket when you posted on Monday… but ended up bookmarking an image from the article.
I’m a sucker for the pleated path pockets, and while I’m not sure it would suit me, think the cream looks great on you in the colour combination you’ve described. I see your point about the gorge, but don’t find it unpalatable as is. In spite of noticing the button on the underside of the collar (RHS) in the first article, I hadn’t put 2 and 2 together and realised the jacket had a throat latch. I think you could have done without that, but I still think this is a highly wearable jacket and perfect for travel.
Would love to see images of the other colours you described in the cotton. Would also love to see a follow up in a year’s time with more wear and washing.
I found your point about the struggle to show how tailoring can be modern and relevant was insightful. Personally, as your tastes and preferences have matured and changed, I think you’ve struck a good balance in this respect. Think the jacket shows that a tailor like W&S is also looking for ways to keep the craft modern and relevant… do good on them for developing such a lovely piece.
Tim

Anon

Is this the overseas Indian (CLASSIC) or full Savile Row bespoke?

Colin

Hey Simon, can you elaborate a little on the gorge issue? Why do you feel it is too high? How do you assess gorge height these days? I admit I don’t notice much of an issue on this.

Christian

Would love to read a seperate article on how to find a flattering gorge height, what factors to consider (does it depend on your shoulder type?), and how it changes the overall appearance of the jacket

K

I second this. I know what I like when it comes to gorge height, but it would be good to hear your perspective, Simon, on how to best make an informed decision around the gorge. I’ve always felt it’s closely linked to lapel width and overall proportions of the lapel-collar relationship. Anyway, sounds like it would make for a perfect PS article!

Ben

No one should pay £2400 for this jacket. I’m certain I can achieve a silhouette indistinguishable to 99% of people via an online MTM service for less than a third of the price, and the remaining 1% understands that, since fit is generous, the fabric is meant to wrinkle, and the aim is for a relaxed, casual vibe, there’s no need for bespoke-level precision. The only “shape in the chest” I see is a puff of excess drape, which suggests a poor fit rather than a strong chest. Hand attached collars have no visual impact here. And the fine stitching and buttonhole details contradict the casual, utilitarian vibe of the jacket’s fabric, construction, and intended purpose.

So what’s left to justify the price is the fabric, but if a major appeal of cotton is how it fades with wear, why choose such a light color that doesn’t fade noticeably? And I literally can’t think of any pleasing way to style a cream cotton jacket. Every look shown here is bland and inharmonious to my eye.