I never quite understood the animosity towards Brandelli as I never understood where many of the premises originated. The way I understand the saga is this. When Kilgour Stanbury and French were about to die,
a group of their bespoke clients formed a company to inject capital and rescue the venerable house. That company was called KFS Group. A main component of the recovery and development strategy was to develop the RTW business by bringing a contemporary flavour to the offer rather than continuing the dusty old stuff offered through retailers like Barneys and Isetan. Brandelli was appointed to realise that strategic vision. He not only put Kilgour back on the map commercially but managed to enable the investors behind KFS to make a phenomenal return when they sold out to JMH. FWIW, unlike what Drapers reported, KFS did not sell Kilgour to JMH but the owners of KFS sold KFS and its subsidiary, viz., Kilgour, to JMH. BTW, JMH is registered in Dubai but the principal is not an Arab (JMH as in James M Hay); I just mention it because people seem fascinated enough about the Dubai connection that they always feel compelled to mention Dubai when referring to JMH.
Brandelli did exactly what he was drafted in to do, and then some. I wonder how one arrives at the conclusion that he left because he does not like bespoke. JMH, given the market environment, decided to reduce risk exposure and working capital requirements by concentrating on bespoke where there is no inventory risk. If the focus is now on bespoke, there is no need for a creative director like Brandelli. I don't know how Brandelli's sentiments about bespoke had anything to do with the departure. He was literally redundant.
I have never met Brandelli and am not a Kilgour customer. I have no horse in this race. My understanding is based solely on the gossip mill on the Row, so I am happy to be corrected. However, I am just a little puzzled why Brandelli provokes so much negativity.