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If the suit fits, it must be Savile Row

If the suit fits, it must be Savile Row. The legendary London street is now synonymous with expertly tailored suits around the world and in India too

Updated on: Apr 04, 2015 05:58 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By
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Suddenly Savile Row is much in the news again. A month ago, the spy-spoof Kingsman: The Secret Service, (a loving send-up of the old James Bond movies) hit the screens and, contrary to expectations, made a lot of money all over the world.



The film’s central conceit is that Kingsman is a private secret service set up by old-monied families which uses a Savile Row tailor’s shop as a cover. The hero (well, kind of) played by Colin Firth pretends to be a Savile Row tailor and one of the central themes of the movie is that a bespoke Savile Row suit is an essential component in the making of a gentleman.



Even as the world was giggling over Kingsman, we had our own Savile Row moment in Delhi when the media speculated about the origins of a suit worn by our Prime Minister to greet the US President. It turned out that what looked (from a distance) like a stripe in the fabric was actually the Prime Minister’s name.



The British papers tracked down Holland and Sherry on Savile Row and, eager for the publicity, a spokesman for the firm declared that while the company would not discuss individual customers blah, blah, blah, as far as he knew, they were the only company in the world to offer such a service.



The press then jumped to another conclusion: if the fabric was made by Holland and Sherry then no doubt their bespoke division made the suit. Somebody did a quick back-of-the-envelope calculation and decided that given the high cost of Savile Row tailoring plus the fact that the fabric was bespoke, the suit must have cost at least Rs 10 lakh. Soon this estimate was being quoted by the media as fact.



In fact, I’m not sure it cost anywhere near that much. To my (admittedly imperfect) eye, the tailoring looked nothing like Savile Row. In fact, the bandhgala rode up when the PM moved his arms about in a manner that is decidedly un-Savile Row.

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The medium is the message: We had our own Savile Row moment in Delhi, when what looked like a stripe in the fabric was actually the Prime Minister’s name.This leads me to believe the official version that some NRI commissioned the fabric. And yes, it almost certainly was woven by Holland and Sherry.



They specialise in monogrammed fabrics and their catalogue boasts that they can do the same thing in Arabic and Russian which not only gives you some idea of the clients they are targeting but also makes you wonder why this generous NRI did not get them to do the name in Gujarati or Hindi. (Would there have been so much criticism if the PM’s name had appeared in Hindi? I doubt it.)



Having been handed this present, I would imagine that the PM sent the fabric off to his regular tailor who turned out this suit. So the Rs 10 lakh figure could be a vast exaggeration.



But what is it about Savile Row that keeps it in the news decade after decade, even in faraway countries? Partly, I imagine that it is the idea. Savile Row is a street in London where tailors have traditionally had their establishments. But these days many of the tailors have moved to nearby streets (St. George’s Street, Burlington Street etc.) and the term has come to describe a certain kind of tailoring.



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Venice of the east: Rivoli owners Ashok and Sachin Vaish (right) have have tied up with a Venetian tailor, Franco Puppato (left). The suits are much sharper than traditional Savile Row tailoring, with a good rate for Indian customers.



I went to their shop in Delhi’s Rivoli Cinema building to meet Franco and was intrigued to find that he used a system of measuring that I had never come across before. He measured distances across my body from a single spot on my chest.



He called this measure System Trigonometro, and said that it gave him a much better idea of how a jacket should fit than the conventional method. He had learned it from his teacher many decades ago, he explained.



I saw a suit he had made for Sachin, the younger Vaish and while it was much sharper than traditional Savile Row tailoring, it had a certain fashionable look that should appeal to wealthy Indians. You can get yourself measured at Vaish at Rivoli where they will use Franco’s system and then mail him the measurements. He will make the suit for you in Venice, from scratch in a bespoke fashion.



Only a decade ago who would have thought that Savile Row tailoring and Italian bespoke would be so easily available in India? Obviously, Indian men are paying more attention to how they dress and spending much more.



From HT Brunch, April 5

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Vir Sanghvi

Why hide the papers? Why keep the conspiracy theories related to Netaji Subhas Bose’s death alive? And why deny India the truth about the death of one of its great freedom fighters?

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