Good value! May I ask why you have your shirts and suits made in London rather than Paris?Frog in Suit wrote:The prices I quoted above are inclusive of VAT (at the exact UK rate of 17.5 %). I have no experience of other shirtmakers or tailors beyond the ones whose names I mention. I will not comment on any makers except from direct personal experience.Frog in Suit wrote:The price you mention for a shirt is certainly very high. N & L bespoke is less than £ 200 a shirt. As to SR suits, they can be had for less. Mine cost me about £ 2,200 for a two-piece, £ 2.600 for a three-piece.
Frog in Suit
Frog in Suit
Rubinacci shirts
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["quote="mafoofan"]^^^ . In my opinion, the final price of the product and its relative quality should be indicative in and of itself of the value you're getting. " quote mafoofan
viz. a poor value
viz. a poor value
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You may well ask !Bishop of Briggs wrote:Good value! May I ask why you have your shirts and suits made in London rather than Paris?Frog in Suit wrote:The prices I quoted above are inclusive of VAT (at the exact UK rate of 17.5 %). I have no experience of other shirtmakers or tailors beyond the ones whose names I mention. I will not comment on any makers except from direct personal experience.Frog in Suit wrote:The price you mention for a shirt is certainly very high. N & L bespoke is less than £ 200 a shirt. As to SR suits, they can be had for less. Mine cost me about £ 2,200 for a two-piece, £ 2.600 for a three-piece.
Frog in Suit
Frog in Suit
1) Anglophilia and an abiding faith in SR and Jermyn Street and their style/cut.
2) Have you ever priced Charvet (Nothing against Charvet; I have no doubt that they produce superb quality)? I think I read on one of the fora that Smalto made-to-measure starts at € 5,000 and I do not even like their style/cut....If you look around and pick traditional heavier cloths (or good poplins for shirts), you can find excellent value in or around SR/Jermyn Street. I am not rich .
Frog in Suit
PS: I just found out that Acorn, since this thread is ostensibly about shirts, have a new web site: http://www.acornfabrics.co.uk/
Frog in Suit
L'Anglomanie in dress - oh, what a quintessentially French trait that is!
Prior to the French Revolution, the court styles of Versailles dominated in both men and women's fashion. After the Revolution, the Frenchman would have rather dressed like an Englishman in his redingote than a Versailles aristocrat (especially if he valued his head).
So, deeply torn by it though he was, the well dressed Frenchman cast aside l'habite à la Française and took to wearing English styles:
Soon Anglomanie swept Europe, and on reaching Germany, the more conservative types there poured scorn on it as the invasion of a French novelty.
You still find polo boots and cricket bats at the Polo Mansion on Madison Ave. Oddly enough, it is really a French innovation, and a product of the far reaching social implications of the French Revolution!
Prior to the French Revolution, the court styles of Versailles dominated in both men and women's fashion. After the Revolution, the Frenchman would have rather dressed like an Englishman in his redingote than a Versailles aristocrat (especially if he valued his head).
So, deeply torn by it though he was, the well dressed Frenchman cast aside l'habite à la Française and took to wearing English styles:
Soon Anglomanie swept Europe, and on reaching Germany, the more conservative types there poured scorn on it as the invasion of a French novelty.
You still find polo boots and cricket bats at the Polo Mansion on Madison Ave. Oddly enough, it is really a French innovation, and a product of the far reaching social implications of the French Revolution!
Recently, I contacted H. Huntsmans with inquiry. Here's their reply:Concordia wrote:Do Stephen Lachter or his services travel to the US with Norton?
Likewise, has anyone recently tried to get access to Sean O'Flynn's shirts via N&L or Huntsman? For those of us who don't get to London really often, that may be the most practical way to buy.
Unfortunately Mr O'Flynn will not travel to the US; however, we at Huntsman
do travel to the US a few times each year and we can have our cutter take
your measurements and details which will then be passed on to Mr O'Flynn in
order to make you a shirt. Our next trip will be in October this year. The
minimum shirt order is only one, and we require full payment upon order.
Our range of cottons is varied and vast, and our introductory price for a
white cotton shirt starts at £175.
The bare essentials of shirt making are fairly straightforward, requiring
your measurements and four weeks for delivery. As you must already be
aware, Mr O'Flynn is an exceptional shirt maker, who works to the highest
degree of excellence. His services, coupled with ours at H. Huntsman &
Sons, will no doubt meet your requirements.
If you have any further enquiries, please do not hesitate to contact us,
either by return e-mail, by telephone, or by facsimile; the details are
below.
We look forward to your custom.
Yours sincerely
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Sator wrote:L'Anglomanie in dress - oh, what a quintessentially French trait that is!
Frog in Suit
Into the mouth of the lion. Thanks for your intrepid research.charle22 wrote:Recently, I contacted H. Huntsmans with inquiry. Here's their reply:Concordia wrote:Do Stephen Lachter or his services travel to the US with Norton?
Likewise, has anyone recently tried to get access to Sean O'Flynn's shirts via N&L or Huntsman? For those of us who don't get to London really often, that may be the most practical way to buy.
Unfortunately Mr O'Flynn will not travel to the US; however, we at Huntsman
do travel to the US a few times each year and we can have our cutter take
your measurements and details which will then be passed on to Mr O'Flynn in
order to make you a shirt. Our next trip will be in October this year. The
minimum shirt order is only one, and we require full payment upon order.
Our range of cottons is varied and vast, and our introductory price for a
white cotton shirt starts at £175.
The bare essentials of shirt making are fairly straightforward, requiring
your measurements and four weeks for delivery. As you must already be
aware, Mr O'Flynn is an exceptional shirt maker, who works to the highest
degree of excellence. His services, coupled with ours at H. Huntsman &
Sons, will no doubt meet your requirements.
If you have any further enquiries, please do not hesitate to contact us,
either by return e-mail, by telephone, or by facsimile; the details are
below.
We look forward to your custom.
Yours sincerely
Good thing about the "introductory" price-- without it, I suppose we'd be starting at £200 or more.
But soon to be leaving Dunhill who are planning to outsource productionrjman wrote: I've heard good things about David Gale at Dunhill, but I have no personal experience.
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That's typical of Dunhill. The Jermyn Street store is full of snooty foreign salesmen who know nothing about clothes. Kilgour is the same.gmludlow wrote:But soon to be leaving Dunhill who are planning to outsource productionrjman wrote: I've heard good things about David Gale at Dunhill, but I have no personal experience.
Bespoke Smalto shirt starts at EUR 600 and the quality and style is very similar to Charvet. Arnys at EUR 550 each has hand stichings around the sleaves, just ike Rubinnacci.
I am tempted try Rubinacci for suits and shirts and would certainly interested to know more from those who have tried it.
I am tempted try Rubinacci for suits and shirts and would certainly interested to know more from those who have tried it.
It looks as if the "introductory price" includes Huntsman's mark-up. I have never paid more than £160 for one of Sean's shirts (recently up from £155) whatever the fabric. So it seems that Huntsman are taking a £15 cut.
btw, Sean is moving next door to 6 Sackville Street, but his phone number etc. remain the same.
btw, Sean is moving next door to 6 Sackville Street, but his phone number etc. remain the same.
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His web site does not reflect that. Does that mean that he is moving in with Meyer & Mortimer/Jones Chalk & Dawson? As if one needed the extra temptation....JRLT wrote:
btw, Sean is moving next door to 6 Sackville Street, but his phone number etc. remain the same.
Frog in Suit
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