A well-tailored suit isn’t about following trends — it’s about knowing what fits you.
The right jacket brings everything together: structure, confidence, and effortless sophistication.
Here’s how to make sure yours speaks the right language.
Length Is Confidence
A perfect jacket doesn’t shout — it balances.
Aim for a cut that falls just below the hip. That slightly longer line creates flow, movement, and a sense of intention.
Short, cropped jackets can work for fashion-forward moments, but when you’re building timeless style, a longer, structured silhouette always wins.
It’s that quiet confidence — not loud, just right.
Keep the Shoulder Sharp
Your shoulders define the entire shape of your jacket.
The seam should sit right where your shoulder naturally curves — no further. Too short, and you’ll look squeezed in; too wide, and you’ll lose the structure.
When it’s perfect, the sleeve drops straight from the shoulder without pulling or bunching.
That’s precision — the kind that separates a good suit from a great one.
Collar Alignment Is Everything
Fit lives and dies at the collar.
Your jacket collar should rest smoothly against your shirt collar, touching gently without gaps or buckling.
A clean alignment creates visual harmony across your shoulders and chest — the hallmark of real tailoring.
Experiment with lapels that suit your personality: sharp peak lapels for statement-makers, or slim notch lapels for understated sophistication.
Master the Button Rule
If it’s single-breasted, remember the rule: top button closed, bottom button always open.
That slight openness gives your suit natural movement and avoids tension lines.
For double-breasted jackets, go all in — button up and let the fabric drape with intention.
It’s not just about rules — it’s about rhythm, and how your jacket moves with you.
Show a Touch of Cuff
Your sleeves are the finishing touch.
Let 1–2 cm of your shirt cuff peek out from under the jacket sleeve — just enough to show intention, never excess.
It’s the detail that whispers: “this wasn’t random — it was chosen.”