Thanks Costi for your fine words. The Gentleman sent me another 4 of his A. Caraceni suits
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
I will post some pictures as soon as they arrive.
I found a short article about the Caraceni family. It was originally discovered by LL member SilkCity and translated by LL member filangieri on another forum - thank you very much for your efforts!
The Caraceni family, a dynasty of tailors known all over the world, originated in the Abruzzi region (note of the translator: Abruzzi is a mountain area in central Italy, appoximately 100 km east of Roma). The old Tommaso Saraceni lived and worked until the beginning of the 20th century in Ortona (note of the translator: Ortona is a small town near the city of Chieti, in the Abruzzi region), the village where he was born around 1850. Three of his sons (Domenico, Augusto and Galliano) learned the art of tailoring from him. They made the name Caraceni famous in Italy and, later, in the rest of the world. Domenico, the eldest, started his activity in Roma in the beginning of the Twenties, soon to be followed by Augusto and Galliano, who gave their contribution to the success of the company. In the Thirties, Augusto left Roma to open a new “sartoria” in Paris, in a three storey building on the Avenue d'Jena, where all the suit making process took place. Galliano remained in Rome with his brother Domenico. Between 1930 and 1940, the Caraceni’s, in Roma and a Paris, worked relentlessly to reach the peak, and they made it. In the ateliers of the Caraceni’s peole came from all over the world, and among their customers some of the most prominent men of their times: politicians, musicians, authors, playwriters, kings and tycoons.At the start of WW-II in 1940, Augusto, an Italiano in enemy’s land (note of the translator: he was living in Paris, and Mussolini declared war on France on June 10, 1940), was forced to close his mythological atelier in Paris and to go back to his homeland. Domenico died in Roma in the same year. After the war, Galliano revitalized the Roman “sartoria”, while Augusto opend a new one in Milano at 16, Via Fatebenefratelli. Between 1946 andl1970 the art of the Caraceni’s bloomed, and their clientele evolved accordino to the changes of the international society. Between 1970 and 1980, Augusto and Galliano died, but the family tradition lived on with renewed strenght. In Roma, Tommy and Giulio, sons of Galliano, took charge of the “sartoria”, while in Milano Mario, son of Augusto, decided to keep the sign “A. Caraceni” to onor the memory of his father. The third generation of the Caraceni’s was very successful. Mario was appointed with many awards: the “Premio S. Omobono”, the gold medal of the “Unione Milanese Sarti” and the “Gran Premio vita di Sarto” of the “Accademia Nazionale dei Sartori” of Roma. Between 1980 and 1990, the fourth generation was “warming up”, already apprenticing and learning the secrets of the craft in the Roman and Milanese ateliers. The greatest legacy of the Caraceni’s, since their beginnings on the sartorial scene, is their personal approach to the tecniques of the art: they way their suits are cut to follow almost automatically the anatomy of the man who wears it. That is, and will be forever, the secret of the Caraceni’s, until there will be a living member of the family to reveal it to his son (and only to him).