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Collection: Neapolitan Tailoring

Vendor: Brioni

Light Yellow Summer Corduroy Trousers made of Cotton (EU 50)

Regular price $264
Sale price $264 Regular price $428

Vendor: Rotasport

Gray Trousers made of Wool/Polyamide/Elastane (EU 48 / 54 / 56)

Regular price $198
Sale price $198 Regular price

Vendor: Brioni

Pink Trousers made of Cotton ( EU 50)

Regular price $264
Sale price $264 Regular price $659

Vendor: Brioni

Pink Summer Corduroy Trousers made of Cotton (EU 50)

Regular price $264
Sale price $264 Regular price $428

Vendor: Brioni

Light Pink Summer Corduroy Trousers made of Cotton (EU 50)

Regular price $264
Sale price $264 Regular price $428

Vendor: Rotasport

Blue Jeans made of Cotton (EU 56)

Regular price $198
Sale price $198 Regular price $593

Vendor: Brioni

Gray Trousers made of Virgin Wool (EU 48)

Regular price $297
Sale price $297 Regular price $547

Vendor: Luciano Barbera

Navy Trousers made of Cotton (EU 50)

Regular price $231
Sale price $231 Regular price $409

Vendor: Luciano Barbera

Navy Trousers made of Cotton (EU 56)

Regular price $231
Sale price $231 Regular price $369

Vendor: Borrelli

Navy Trousers made of Cotton (EU 48)

Regular price $198
Sale price $198 Regular price $659

Vendor: Rodi

Navy Trousers made of Cotton (EU 52)

Regular price $165
Sale price $165 Regular price

Vendor: Luciano Barbera

Electric Blue Trousers made of Linen ( EU 50)

Regular price $264
Sale price $264 Regular price $448

Vendor: Luciano Barbera

Gray Trousers made of Wool (EU 50)

Regular price $264
Sale price $264 Regular price $428

Vendor: Gucci

Russet Corduroy Pant made of Cotton (EU 46)

Regular price $328
Sale price $328 Regular price $1,159

Vendor: Zegna

Black Shirt Jacket made of Wool/ Silk/Cashmere (EU 48)

Regular price $921
Sale price $921 Regular price $3,950

Vendor: Gucci

Dusty Brown Sweatshirt made of Drill Cotton (EU 48)

Regular price $394
Sale price $394 Regular price $1,291

Vendor: Burberry

Black-Brown Leather Flight Jacket with Removable Shearling Collar (M, L)

Regular price $1,842
Sale price $1,842 Regular price $5,464

Vendor: Brunello Cucinelli

Light Gray Melange Vest made of Cotton (M)

Regular price $1,052
Sale price $1,052 Regular price $3,687

Vendor: Borrelli

Beige Trousers made of Cotton (34)

Regular price $198
Sale price $198 Regular price $593

Vendor: Borrelli

Offwhite Trousers made of Cotton (34)

Regular price $198
Sale price $198 Regular price $593

Vendor: Rotasport

Beige Trousers made of Cotton (EU 52)

Regular price $198
Sale price $198 Regular price $593

Vendor: Gucci

Bone New Bara Thea Blazer made of Wool (EU 52)

Regular price $1,645
Sale price $1,645 Regular price $3,160

Vendor: Zegna

Navy Shirt Jacket made of Wool (M)

Regular price $1,447
Sale price $1,447 Regular price $4,279

Vendor: Borrelli

Blue/White Checkered Shirt made Cotton (EU 42)

Regular price $187
Sale price $187 Regular price $421

Vendor: Borrelli

Blue-White Checkered Shirt made Cotton (EU 42)

Regular price $187
Sale price $187 Regular price $421

Vendor: Marco Pescarolo

Black Jeans made of Cotton (W33 / W34 / W35 / W36)

Regular price $165
Sale price $165 Regular price $388

Vendor: Marco Pescarolo

Blue Washed-out Jeans made of Cotton (W35 / W36 / W37)

Regular price $165
Sale price $165 Regular price $388

Vendor: Marco Pescarolo

Blue Jeans made of Cotton (W34 / W35 / W36)

Regular price $165
Sale price $165 Regular price $388

Vendor: Saint Crispin's

Green Loafer made of Suede (EU 40)

Regular price $884
Sale price $884 Regular price $1,879

Vendor: Unützer

Orange/Brown Espandrilles made of Cotton/Leather (EU 45)

Regular price $154
Sale price $154 Regular price $331

Vendor: Fedeli

Brown Mokassins made of Leather (EU 45)

Regular price $110
Sale price $110 Regular price $332

Vendor: Kired

Khaki Sport Vest made of Polyamide (EU 52)

Regular price $442
Sale price $442 Regular price $886

Vendor: Borrelli

Pink/White Checkered Shirt made of Cotton (EU 42)

Regular price $187
Sale price $187 Regular price $421

Vendor: Borrelli

Blue/White Checked Cuffed Shirt made Cotton (EU 42)

Regular price $187
Sale price $187 Regular price $421

Vendor: Caruso

Indigo Blue/Black Smoking made of Wool (EU 54)

Regular price $1,106
Sale price $1,106 Regular price $2,434

Vendor: Gucci

Navy Suit made of Wool/Mohair (EU 56)

Regular price $1,645
Sale price $1,645 Regular price $3,292

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Neapolitan Suit

A Neapolitan suit isn’t merely a garment; it’s a biography written in cloth—one that recounts sun‑bleached piazzas, spirited Vespas zipping through Spaccanapoli, and generations of tailors who treat a needle like a conductor’s baton. What separates the Neapolitan jacket from its English or Roman siblings? Start with the shoulders: softly rounded, virtually unpadded, and often finished with the famed spalla camicia, a shirring technique that looks almost like gentle ripples at the sleevehead. This absence of structure coaxes the jacket to drape like a second skin, hugging the torso while allowing full arm mobility—perfect for the expressive hand gestures southern Italians are known for.

Step closer and you’ll spot the barchetta breast pocket, shaped like a little boat to echo Naples’ maritime soul. Lapels sweep wide and high, sometimes boasting a pronounced roll‑three‑to‑two button stance that frames the chest without suffocation. Trousers? Slim, but not strangled; they sit just below the natural waist, often with side‑tab adjusters instead of belt loops, ensuring a clean, uninterrupted line. Fabrics lean lighter: high‑twist wools, airy fresco, linen, or blends that shrug off Mediterranean heat while still draping elegantly.

But the defining virtue of a Neapolitan suit is sprezzatura—effortless style. It whispers instead of shouts, embodying confidence so innate it never needs posturing. Slip one on and you’ll feel it: the jacket collar kisses your shirt, the quarters open just enough to reveal a glimpse of knit tie or a roll‑neck sweater. You’re polished, yet unrestrained, ready to savor an espresso on Via Toledo or negotiate a deal in London’s Mayfair.

Napoli Tailor

Finding a Napoli tailor is like discovering a hidden trattoria where the pasta tastes of nonna’s kitchen—personal, incomparable, unforgettable. Naples brims with sartorie, many nestled in 18th‑century palazzi whose peeling stucco hides world‑class craftsmanship. Step into one and you’re enveloped by bolts of Loro Piana fresco, vintage paper patterns, and the hum of treadle machines that haven’t missed a beat in eighty years.

The process begins with misure: more than twenty measurements captured with a tape, but also posture, shoulder slope, even how you sway when you walk. Next comes scelta dei tessuti—choosing cloth. While English mills supply crisp worsteds, Neapolitans adore vibrant checks, dusty pastels, and playful herringbones. Swatches unfurl like tarot cards, each predicting a different version of you.

After your first basted fitting, the tailor sculpts the canvas, trims excess, and hand‑sews armholes so your movement stays unrestricted. Expect at least two more fittings; perfection can’t be rushed. Throughout, the maestro steadies the garment on iron‑shod tables, coaxing shape with billows of steam. In the end, you receive not only a suit but a friendship sealed with espresso and anecdotes.

If a pilgrimage to Naples isn’t in the cards, many ateliers travel. Trunk shows in New York, Tokyo, and Dubai allow global connoisseurs to taste Vesuvian tailoring without boarding a flight. Regardless of location, the credo remains: individual expression, artisanal tradition, and a handshake that feels like family.

Neapolitan Style Suit

A Neapolitan style suit differs subtly from a pure bespoke creation yet still channels the same aesthetic DNA.

Think of it as ready‑to‑wear translated into Neapolitan dialect: softer lines, natural shoulders, high armholes, and forward‑pitch sleeves for a graceful silhouette.

Brands such as Isaia, Cesare Attolini, and Orazio Luciano export these hallmarks worldwide, offering off‑the‑rack or made‑to‑measure options that flirt with the bespoke realm.

Key characteristics:

  • Light Canvas: A single lightweight layer or even unlined construction to maximize airflow.
  • Extended Front Darts: Seam lines run deep toward the hem, shaping the waist elegantly.
  • Patch Pockets: Casual yet refined; they echo the relaxed vibe of Via Chiaia.
  • Slim Sleeve Circumference: Promotes a clean profile and prevents fabric billow.
  • Finishing Touches: Hand‑stitched pick‑stitching, genuine horn buttons, and lightly barchetta pockets.

Pair the jacket with high‑twist wool trousers and tassel loafers; swap to white sneakers and raw denim for weekend sprezz.

The versatility underscores why Neapolitan style has conquered global menswear: it’s sartorial armor that never feels rigid.

Neapolitan Cut Suit

The term Neapolitan cut suit zeroes in on technical anatomy. Where British tailoring features roped shoulders and heavy canvassing, the Neapolitan cut lightens everything without losing shape.

Armholes are higher and smaller, allowing sleeves to rotate freely—an asset in an age of laptops and steering wheels. Side seams curve appreciably at the waist, achieving shape sans padding.

Trousers often feature a slight forward pleat—pince in local parlance—adding comfort while preserving a slim seat.

Hems hover just above the shoe, revealing a glimpse of colorful socks or a sun‑kissed ankle.

Inside pockets are minimal; extra structure only weighs the jacket down. Even buttonholes are sewn with lustrous silk thread, hand‑bar‑tacked so they flex with use.

When you invest in a Neapolitan cut suit, you’re betting on mobility and aesthetic harmony.

You can hail a cab, raise a toast, or bear‑hug an old friend without feeling the seams protest. It’s luxury engineered for life, not a museum.

Neapolitan Tailoring

Neapolitan tailoring isn’t monolithic; it’s a spectrum governed by family houses, each with distinct nuances:

  • Attolini: As light as a linen handkerchief, with extraordinary handwork visible in every curve.
  • Kiton: Ultra‑luxury fabrics—sometimes vicuña—married to meticulous craftsmanship and symmetrical lapel rolls.
  • Rubinacci: Daring colors and flamboyant patterns, favored by artists and modern dandies.
  • Sartoria Solito, Panico, Dalcuore: Boutique ateliers focusing strictly on full bespoke, often requiring three or more fittings.

Despite differences, these artisans share common threads: hand‑padded lapels, open quarters, and the philosophy that a jacket should float, not clamp. They avow that a suit’s job is to celebrate the wearer’s movements, not dictate them. In workshops overlooking Vesuvius, young apprentices still learn old techniques—pick stitching, buttonhole gimping, sleeve shirring—preserving skills that fast fashion long abandoned.

Global influence is evident. Vogue editors commission lightweight navy hopsack jackets for fashion weeks; tech CEOs seek casual cashmere sport coats that read smart on Zoom yet feel like cardigans. Even streetwear labels borrow the spalla camicia silhouette for relaxed bomber jackets. Thus, Neapolitan tailoring doesn’t remain parochial—it seeds creativity across fashion genres.

Neapolitan Suit Sale


Securing a Neapolitan Suit sale can feel like landing a reservation at a hidden Michelin bistro: elusive but exhilarating. Because artisanal production is limited, deep discounts are rare. Still, strategies exist:

  1. End‑of‑Season Drops: January and July often bring 20–40% reductions on ready‑to‑wear from Isaia, Boglioli, or Eidos.
  2. Online Luxury Outlets: Sites like Yoox, The Rake, and Mr. Porter’s “Archive” occasionally list past seasons at compelling prices. Act fast—popular sizes vanish in hours.
  3. Trunk Show Bundles: Made‑to‑measure programs sometimes waive surcharges on premium fabrics during special events, saving you hundreds.
  4. Sample Sales: Milan, London, and New York host pop‑up clearances where runway samples from Attolini or Rubinacci appear at half‑price. Expect queues, but the payoff—hand‑embroidered lapels for the price of mass‑market suits—is unrivaled.
  5. Pre‑Owned Market: Platforms like Grailed and Styleforum’s classifieds feature gently worn bespoke pieces. Measure carefully; Neapolitan fits are forgiving in the chest but tricky to alter in the shoulders.

When bargain hunting, keep your head: a deeply discounted jacket that doesn’t quite fit defeats the purpose. Confirm shoulder width, sleeve pitch, and overall balance before pulling the trigger. Alterations can refine but seldom reinvent.