David: I very much enjoy your blog and find it to be a great source of inspiration in my desire to master the art of permanent style. I was hoping you could help me in the matter of choosing odd jackets. I am starting a new job where most people wear a jacket but no one wears a necktie. I will probably wear grey flannel trousers, beige chinos and a light-coloured shirt. But I am not sure what odd jackets to wear. I don’t currently own any. What would you recommend to me if I have only one, three or five odd jackets to use for work?
The first thing to ensure about an odd jacket is that it goes well with the trousers. They must not clash in their pattern and they must be of a similar formality. As both your suggested pairs of trousers are plain, pattern is not much of an issue. And as they are both relatively informal, the jackets should reflect this in their cloth.
So my first suggestion to you would be a jacket in a pale grey, with a heavy texture in the cloth and in a relatively informal wool. So not worsted, but flannel, tweed, camel hair or something similarly rough. The heavy texture could be a herringbone or a hound’s-tooth. (Like the one pictured – from J.Crew)
The reason I suggest this for your first jacket is that the pattern is not too bold or eye-catching – there is enough visual interest to distinguish it from the trousers, but it is not a loud tweed. It is also classic and simple without being uniform – a blazer would offer less personality in your one item.
Your second jacket should be a blazer, though. Navy blue, preferably in something heavier than standard worsted wool, and fitting immaculately. Too many Americans wear a blazer and chinos out of laziness. Neither is likely to fit well and the jacket will rarely be buttoned. To differentiate yourself, get a blazer that is slim-cut, perhaps with just one button. And don’t go for brass buttons – something different, either plain blue or a different metal; perhaps even a cream colour like the Italians.
Third for me would be a tweed. The colour is a question of personal taste, as is the size of the check, but make sure it is slim (again) and smart enough to look at home both in the country and the office. I have a Donegal one-button tweed from Kilgour, in mid-grey, that I would put in this category.
Fourth, something for the summer – a tan linen or cotton gabardine. Make sure the linen is heavy, and if you think tan would be too casual, switch to a navy or a grey.
The fifth jacket can be something more adventurous: a classic black stroller if you want to add formality, something in an unusual colour like mid-green if you want to add flair.
When building the collection, just bear in mind that you want a spread of weights for different seasons and a spread of formalities for different occasions.








There's some great jackets in jcrew at the moment plus the styling of the looks on their site is fantastic. They are way ahead of polo, banana republic....well done guys!
ReplyDeleteMight raise a few eyebrows but for you guys in the UK there's actually some great tweed jackets in M&S currently...if you hunt. In the 'collezione' range there's some soft construction jackets with nothing in the shoulder which fit well (buy a size down) there's tan herringbone (£99!!!) also a double face, buggy lined, patch pkt jacket I bought for £149. Its mid grey brushed flannel on the outside and tan h/bone inside. It really is a great find! I'm a 42L normally but bought the 40R which is shorter (more on trend) plus it fit really well.... worth a look !
Great advice as always, Simon. I particularly liked the suggestion of a stroller, though if David finds black too severe, he can always go for charcoal gray.
ReplyDeleteAs for blazers and blazer buttons, I'd say your first blazer should be single-breasted and the second one double-breasted. My blazers have antiqued silver buttons, but I really like your suggestions for alternatives. I'd consider cream for a summer blazer.
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ReplyDeletesimon, while looking for a new odd jacket ive begun to look at the type and weight of wools used to judge where and when it may be suitable to wear.
ReplyDeletei have a question on the super 100s wools, if you go up in terms of the super number, say a s130 instead of a s120,the fibres are finer (which makes it feel softer but negatively affects durability i assume), does this also mean the jacket will wear warmer if the weight is the same, say 9 oz wool? my logic is that a finer wool (the s130 vs s120) for the same weight of wool would contain more yarn and therefore be more dense?
cheers,
andy
You're right on the durability Andy, but the difference to how warm it wears will be negligible
DeleteSimon,
ReplyDeleteWhere in the above "scheme" would you rank the W Bill cashmere jacket GB made for you? Would it do as a first "light grey"?
Thanks,
S
Yes I would say so. Nice texture to it, very versatile
Deletehi simon, want to buya nice rtw blazer, youve mentioned dunhill ones in the past. have you had any experience of the make? any idea who makes them for dunhill?
ReplyDeletethanks, rajesh