Thursday 4 May 2023

King Charles’s style — from Savile Row suits to traditional textiles

 



CORONATION

King Charles’s style — from Savile Row suits to traditional textiles

 

The new monarch’s bespoke wardrobe may seem to set him apart, but his sartorial conservatism is peak 2023

 


Anna Murphy

Tuesday May 02 2023, 5.00pm BST, The Times

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/a7540e0a-e44f-11ed-9d9d-927ca944996b?shareToken=b79e05c92ff3de9fceef7f69d08a2223

 

One of the things I remember most clearly about the time I met the man who would become King Charles was his pick stitching. This was five years ago. Yet I can still conjure in my mind’s eye his lapels, edged with that variety of minutely rendered hand embroidery that sets apart the bespoke suit wearer from the rest of us.

 

The silk handkerchief in the top pocket of his double-breasted (always double-breasted) jacket also underlined the point of difference. As did a cut so sharp that I couldn’t help but think of that notorious royal dandy the Duke of Windsor, the great-uncle with whom Charles shares not just a love of Savile Row tailoring but also of a woman who was once married to someone else.

 

Those suits from Anderson & Sheppard and Gieves & Hawkes aren’t the only tells that Charles is anything but an everyman. There can’t be many men’s wardrobes that encompass not only two varieties of tailoring, one for town, one for country, but also kilts, safari suits, skiwear and — once upon a time, although no more — polo gear. Forget the 0.1 per cent. This is the 0.01 per cent.

 

The younger generation of royals may be trying to dress like us just often enough to convince us that they are like us — the Prince of Wales in his Nike trainers, his wife in her Zara — but Charles certainly isn’t. By contemporary standards what he wears is buttoned up, to say the least. He wears a tie when out on a yomp, for goodness’ sake!

 

In fact even the Duke of Windsor managed to come across as more relaxed, favouring for his suiting the softened lines of the so-called English drape. Charles’s stiffer look underlines his military bearing, but it also makes him appear like a fish out of water in the era of Netflix and chill.

 

Yet perhaps that is how a king is supposed to seem? The late Queen certainly dressed to set herself apart; above. That’s the job, after all. What’s more, Charles’s expensive tastes are unquestionably British and support both traditional textile producers and artisans working at the highest level. He puts his money where his mouth is when it comes to his wardrobe choices as well as his architectural preferences.

 

There is certainly none of that laid-back yet still pricey sports luxe vibe that is these days worn by the lesser-spotted billionaire from Chelsea to Chengdu. Does one ever wear cashmere track pants? No, one does not. And it’s clear that his eye for detail, his fussiness, doesn’t only encompass the matter of pens. That aforementioned pocket square of his is — another thing I remember — frothed up like a cappuccino.

 

Charles’s aesthetic language is of another era, in short, in part because some of his clothes are, in the most literal sense. “I am one of those people who hate throwing anything away,” he told Vogue in 2020. This statement, which might once have seemed old-fashioned, now appears, as the world finally wakes up to the true cost of disposable fashion, positively future-facing. Charles’s sartorial conservatism is, in other words, peak 2023.


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