A blazer stripe is not for the faint of heart. Especially when the model is double breasted.
Let's take a little journey to go over this bespoke tailored suit and what it features and why.
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Let's take a little journey to go over this bespoke tailored suit and what it features and why.
Of all men’s suitings, none has ever matched the glamour and popularity of the striped suit. At one time or another in the thirties, the striped suit probably graced every pair of male shoulders, from the humble to the most famous, from the unemployed to the chairman of the board.
Although its stripes have to be positioned perfectly for maximum effect, this pattern’s innate appeal derived from its vertical line. Elongating any physique, the striped worsted quickly established itself as the patriarch of all patterned dress suits.
The variety and scale of classy suiting stripes are endless. They can be in single, double, or triple tracks, against a plain or fancy background. Lines can be faint or bold, from subtle shadows to hairlines to pins, up to pencils or chalks, in spacings ranging from narrow to wide.
The striped jacket and matching trouser formed their own partnership around the turn of the century when the lounge suit started to replace the black jacket and odd striped trouser for business dress. When the Prince of Wales launched the daytime vogue for shadowy chalk stripes, he elevated the stripe suit to a new level of cosmopolitan consciousness.
Read moreWhile the Victorian era entertained tartans and the turn of the century hosted checks, it wasn’t until the 1920s that plaid clothing revolutionized the rules of urban style, following the English trend in which “country” began to impinge upon “town” in matters of male dress. Although some checks like the houndstooth enjoyed a distinguished career, none would become as enduringly stylish as the Glen Plaid.
This classic plaid has a couple different names that you might know it by: Glen plaid, Glen check, Glen Urquhart plaid (Glenurquhart), Prince of Wales check, etcetera. It’s a woollen fabric with a woven twill design consisting of small and large checks. It is usually made of black/grey and white (or with more muted colours like faint taupes), often overlaid with a windowpane accent colour (commonly sky blue, but also seen in lavender, red, etc). It’s a very subtle and muted pattern, making it a favourite among conservative businessmen.
Click here to view more this Prince of Wales with Red Overcheck suit .
The name is taken from the valley of Glenurquhart in Inverness-shire, Scotland, where the checked wool was first used in the 19th century by the New Zealand-born Countess of Seafield to outfit her gamekeepers (hence the slightly more sporty feel).
Glen Plaid is also sometimes nicknamed the “Prince of Wales check”, as it was popularized by legendary style icon Duke of Windsor, while he was the Prince of Wales, of course. Still what is referred to as 'the Prince of Wales check', is when there is a blue overcheck on the black and white Glen Plaid pattern.
For the sartorial romantic, the Glen Plaid suit conjured up images of strolling in the fresh and radiant light of a spring morning. Its charm stemmed from the overall lightness achieved through a refined play of vertical and horizontal lines that intersect at regular intervals over a houndstooth check. Sometimes thin threads of bright colour (red, blue, rust, pink) were woven through the checks.
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