Gentlemen,
a fellow member with a very good eye just wrote this to me:
From my side, there was no such intention. But honestly, I didn't even notice. I went to my closet and looked for examples. The same tailor has cut a second coat from the same cloth where he didn't do this.I noticed something I had not seen before, which is that the pattern of the tweed on the facings of the jacket is inverted from the pattern on the body. Meaning, on the body of the jacket, the white horizontal stripe is below the rust stripe and on the facings the white stripe is above the rust stripe. As the facings are usually a separate piece, I was wondering: was this intentional or was it an error on the part of your tailor?
But looking very closely at both coats, there is a pattern matching limitation anyway. We have a triple window pane with four colours. The middle stripe is either burgundy or green; the others are rust and light blue (may look white on the picture). So when you look at the collar and the lapel: They cannot match on both sides. The center of one collar matches with the back piece with one coat, but not with the other. Normally, this should match, but there are exceptions
Now the question is how serious is the issue with the facings? Is it a mistake, a caprice? The pattern on both facings must run the same way - but is it a mistake if it is inverted with the coat body? Frank, what is your opinion?
My amateurish opinion: I'm not too obsessed with pattern matching, a coat is no jigsaw puzzle. My focus is on overall fit, comfort and harmony which should result in putting me in the best possible light, full stop.
Are there any other views out here?
Cheers, David