Page 1 of 1

Costumes de politiciens

Posted: Tue Mar 14, 2017 12:39 am
by Melcombe
Our beloved forum is wonderfully devoid of political discussion...

...but politicians are people too, or so they say, and despite the efforts of certain politicos to denigrate all human decency (let alone sartorial elegance) by their behaviour, occasionally a charming note of style pops up and raises a smile.

From the Financial Times (London)

François Fillon’s taste in bespoke suits draws criticism.

François Fillon says France must cut its cloth — even as the cut of his own cloth obsesses the nation.
The embattled French presidential hopeful on Monday promised to deliver a “shock treatment” of austerity and deregulation if elected, sticking to a free-market economic platform that has evoked comparisons with Margaret Thatcher...

But Mr Fillon’s expensive taste in suits has become the latest problem for his presidential campaign, which has been sent off-course by allegations that have cast doubt over his ethics...

Drawing attention to potential conflicts of interest, the Journal du Dimanche newspaper revealed on Sunday that an unnamed friend of the candidate had written a €13,000 cheque last month “at Mr Fillon’s request” to buy him two bespoke suits from a boutique in Paris’s expensive Saint-Germain-des-Prés neighbourhood.

The Saint-Germain tailor that has dressed philosophers and presidents


François Fillon was named one of the 20 best dressed Frenchmen in 2016 by men’s magazine GQ — notably ahead of Emmanuel Macron, his rival to become the next president of France.

The accolade may have something to do with his choice of outfitter, Arnys, a smart Parisian tailor now owned by luxury conglomerate LVMH, which has dressed the likes of Andy Warhol and Jean-Paul Sartre, writes Harriet Agnew in Paris.

It emerged this week that Mr Fillon was given €13,000 from an unnamed friend to procure two bespoke Arnys suits...

Arnys has been frequented by politicians from left and right for years. President François Mitterrand bought his trademark black felt hat from Arnys in the 1980s on the advice of Pierre Bergé, longtime business partner of late fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent. It was marked with his initials and went on to inspire a novel called “The Hat of Mitterrand” by Antoine Laurain, according to Le Parisien newspaper.

The brand was created by the Grimberts, a family of Jewish merchants who arrived in France at the end of the 19th century. In 1933 the firm changed its name to Arnys and moved from Place de l’Opéra on the right bank to 14 Rue de Sèvres in the Saint-Germain-des Près district that was at the time the heart of the city’s bohemian culture.

The store’s signature Forestière jacket boasts turn-back cuffs, open patch pockets and a lapel-free cut, inspired by the traditional jacket worn by gamekeepers in the Sologne region.

It was designed with Swiss-French architect Le Corbusier in the 1940s when he sought a flexible city jacket that allowed him to work. Mr Fillon himself opted for the Forestière jacket on a visit to then president Nicolas Sarkozy’s residence at Brégançon in 2010.

Clients can choose between three thousand different fabrics and each individual piece takes about 70 hours of work and costs around €6000.

In 2012 Arnys was acquired by LVMH, the largest luxury group in the world by revenues. The brand was then combined with menswear group Berluti, whose chief executive Antoine Arnault is the son of Bernard Arnault, LVMH chairman and chief executive.

Ici M Fillon dans son Arnys (with his chum Nicolas - who knows how to dress)

Image

Re: Costumes de politiciens

Posted: Tue Mar 14, 2017 3:30 am
by davidhuh
Dear Melcombe,

looking from Switzerland, French politics are a source for endless inspiration, and, occasionally, good fun. This story belongs to the latter.

I'm not so convinced about Mr Sarkozy being Mr Fillon's "chum" anymore. And I'm astonished why nobody mentions Mr. Mitterands suits by Cifonelli. La gauche caviar had better taste, definitely 8) - and likely better, or at least more discreet funding sources.

Cheers, David

Re: Costumes de politiciens

Posted: Tue Mar 14, 2017 5:16 pm
by hectorm
Melcombe wrote: From the Financial Times (London)
The accolade may have something to do with his choice of outfitter, Arnys, a smart Parisian tailor now owned by luxury conglomerate LVMH, which has dressed the likes of Andy Warhol and Jean-Paul Sartre,
I thought that Arnys didn't exist any more. I never liked their garment style but I loved their haberdashery stuff and specially the beautiful shop. Used to be a mandatory stop when in Paris. Now I see that their disappearance was just for us mere mortals; demi-gods still have access.

Re: Costumes de politiciens

Posted: Tue Mar 14, 2017 11:37 pm
by davidhuh
hectorm wrote: I thought that Arnys didn't exist any more. I never liked their garment style but I loved their haberdashery stuff and specially the beautiful shop. Used to be a mandatory stop when in Paris. Now I see that their disappearance was just for us mere mortals; demi-gods still have access.
Dear Hector,

you can still go there - they continue doing bespoke. But the haberdashery you liked is gone, or not at the level it used to be.

Cheers, David

Re: Costumes de politiciens

Posted: Wed Mar 15, 2017 5:49 pm
by Melcombe
hectorm wrote: I never liked their garment style but I loved their haberdashery stuff and specially the beautiful shop.

... Now I see that their disappearance was just for us mere mortals; demi-gods still have access.
I was intrigued by some of the comments made about their acquisition by LVMH, elsewhere. Plainly they were a Parisian landmark in their heyday, but now - not even a website (perhaps that would be just,well, too vulgar?).

Im more intrigued by the Forestiere jacket idea. I do like the concept (modern, indeed modernist - and the Le Corbusier stamp of approval too), but the execution seems a bit odd as a demonstration of tailoring skill. Am I missing something?

Image

Surely - SURELY - that thing didn't run to a few '000 Euro?

Re: Costumes de politiciens

Posted: Fri Apr 28, 2017 1:26 pm
by rodes
Last evening, I noticed that the Prime Minister of Canada addressed his nation without wearing a tie. Unbelievable.

Re: Costumes de politiciens

Posted: Fri Apr 28, 2017 4:51 pm
by hectorm
I could not find a clip of this specific young Trudeau´s tieless address.
Leaving aside the appropriateness of the occasion, was he wearing a full suit? Loafers with it? A button-down shirt? Unbuttoned his second button or just the collar one? Not even the collar one? :)

Re: Costumes de politiciens

Posted: Fri Apr 28, 2017 8:59 pm
by Melcombe
Image

Incroyable ! (indeed :) )

And it looks as if he's left his coat undone. I blame Prince William's recent example..

Image

There - he heard me.

Re: Costumes de politiciens

Posted: Thu May 04, 2017 8:46 pm
by hectorm
Melcombe wrote: And it looks as if he's left his coat undone. I blame Prince William's recent example..
Sometimes these are good examples.... provided you wear a DB jacket, put your hands in your pockets, tuck your necktie into your trousers and use a tie bar on top of it. :lol:
Image

Re: Costumes de politiciens

Posted: Thu May 04, 2017 9:10 pm
by davidhuh
:lol: :lol:

Re: Costumes de politiciens

Posted: Fri May 05, 2017 3:46 am
by couch
. . . and collect souvenir badges on your lapels. (Though, to be sure, some of those may have been acquired in the line of ribbon-cutting or charitable-visiting duty).