I think there is much ado about not too much in this thread. The clothes made by Scholte were all in his original drape style. And in reality a very refined and subtle drape as opposed to the exaggerations that grew out from the idea in the 1940s and still may exist to this day.
I have the advantage of having held five or six of Windsor’s coats in my hand. So the relating of these facts does not come as a matter of supposition but of practical experience. At the time I was struck by how similar the coats were to my own soft tailored clothes. In fact, I removed my own coat and held the two in my hands and felt very little difference.
Like my own coat, there was very little pad in the Duke’s. And if we look at the following picture we can clearly see why: Windsor had very square shoulders. He didn’t need any padding in the shoulder, just enough to attach the sleeve.
As regards the overall construction, the coats were classic soft tailored and felt sweater-like. The shape of the lapel, collar, notch, back neck and armhole of the Duke’s coat was virtually identical to my own. And that is not a surprise when you consider that the Scholte style was copied by tailors who worked with him when they opened their own shop. This style was subsequently taught and passed on to other tailors with little variation (and it was passed onto the man who learned from those tailors and made my coat.)
Cheers
Michael Alden