Thursday, 26 March 2026

The Decline of Savile Row: A Story of Obsolete Luxury


The world's most prestigious tailoring street is facing extinction, and it's not what you'd expect. Savile Row – the birthplace of bespoke tailoring where master craftsmen spend 80 hours hand-stitching suits for royalty and billionaires – is under siege from crushing economic forces that threaten to destroy 200 years of unparalleled luxury craftsmanship. These aren't just any suits; they're £6,700 masterpieces from the street that literally invented the word "bespoke" and inspired the Japanese word for suit itself.

 

The mathematics are brutal: business rates are set to skyrocket by 144% next year, forcing average properties to pay £76,934 instead of £31,536 – a death sentence for shops selling just 200 suits annually on razor-thin margins. This is the story of true artisans who've dressed kings and created the dinner jacket for future King Edward VII, now watching helplessly as modern economics threatens to end centuries of tradition. Discover how the last bastion of genuine craftsmanship battles against forces completely beyond their control, and what the loss of Savile Row would mean for luxury and heritage worldwide.


Monday, 23 March 2026

HORNETS AGAIN AND AGAIN ... FOREVER

There's a chap who virtually dresses me at a shop called Hornets. It's a second-hand Gent's clothing shop in Kensington Church Walk. Full of Saville Row suits and weird and wonderful military dress jackets. The shoes have been resoled so many times I've propbably paid five times as much in repairs as I did originally. They're from Hornets; they're Carvillle. The company strapline is "The shop for the amorous man", which is slightly creepy. Clothes are a mechanism of communication - people are adept at reading clothes, and you can manipulate that. Wear a bicorn hat or a hussars jacket to a party and everyone will pay attention.; My style icon Toad from The Wind in the Willows.By Sam Bompas



Hornets


2 & 4 Kensington Church Walk , London W8 4NB


36b Kensington Church Street , London W8 4BX














Sunday, 22 March 2026

Adieu Bill.

 


We heard from friends the very sad news of the death of "Bill Hornets" (William Wilde).

Bill had dinner once in our house when he was visiting Tommy Page in Amsterdam.

 Bill The Guv'nor was an important figure and character in London daily life.

He played a very important role in the Vintage London scene offering the highest quality of clothing for men. He has always refused the concept and phenomenon of Vintage saying always that he was a Secondhand clothes dealer and seller.

He was the proud owner of three fabulous little shops in Kensington.

He always remains in our memory and will never be forgotten by us.

Adieu Bill. May your soul rest in peace and that you will find the light that you always aspired with your continuous search for quality.

Sérgio and Trudie.

 


"Bill Hornets" (William Wilde) was a well-known figure in Kensington's vintage scene, noted for his three stores on Kensington Church Street and Church Walk, specializing in classic men's style.

While an Instagram post in April 2025 by Hornets Kensington announced the sad death of a team member named Chris Bannon (signed by #billhornets), Bill Wilde himself was still actively linked to the business in a Standard article from September 2025.



In Memoriam: To Bill with our warmest regards and the best memories of London Sérgio (JEEVES) & Trudie / The Hornets in Kensington Offers London Men Style, Not Fashion


In Memoriam: To Bill with our warmest regards and the best memories of London
Sérgio (JEEVES) & Trudie

This interview was first published in The Wall Street Journal…

 Known in the vintage-clothes business as “Bill Hornets,” William Hornets Wilde is one of those English gentlemen whom visitors to London imagine the city must be filled with. It isn’t, of course, which is what makes Mr. Wilde and his shops so special.

 He owns three stores in the Kensington area: two for vintage suits, hats and shoes, and a third for seasonal wear—whether that’s tweeds for the shooting season, tails for Ascot or any other esoteric formal-outing requirements.

 Although Mr. Wilde won’t mention names (“I never recognize anybody,” he said), his extensive inventory has made loyal customers out of designers like Ralph Laure and Tom Ford.

 Mostly, though, Mr. Wilde caters to country gentlemen, aristocrats, royal cousins, university students—patrons who prefer to avoid the expense and formality of Jermyn Street and the fickleness of the fashion industry.

 Anyone in the market for say, a bespoke 1960s Anderson & Sheppard kid mohair suit, a vintage alligator-skin suitcase or a ’30s chocolate-brown smoking jacket are well advised to drop in.

 Mr. Wilde, who was also a TV actor in the ’60s and ’70s (now best remembered for his part in “Blood Beast Terror” from the British film studio Hammer), maintains a network of buyers throughout southern England who forage for treasures at estate sales and flea markets.



In-store, Mr. Wilde helps customers with questions of sartorial refinement, promoting his modus operandi (proudly displayed on the Hornets website: “Not Fashion. Style.”

 One should never follow fashion for fashion’s sake. With classic style you stand out from the crowd, with fashion you become one of the crowd.

 The best pair of shoes I own are brown brogues from George Cleverley.

 The great figures of style are the Duke of Windsor, Cary Grant, the present Prince of Wales.

 I prefer French cuffs and straight collars.

 A bow tie can be worn in day time with a jacket or three-piece suit.

The lady on your arm can be extravagant and colorful. You have to be quietly masculine. At Ascot, a morning suit is very simple, but a lady can be fairly outrageous with her hat. A man has to be simple in his dress.

 I wish men wouldn’t tie a hangman’s knot in their scarves, nor wear beanie hats, trainers or colorful silk waistcoats with morning suits. There are more offenses, but they are too terrible to mention.

 My favorite suit was a three-piece chalk-stripe Huntsman. It fit me so beautifully, as if I were poured into it. The pants were cut very high, military style. The waistcoat had small lapels. As I am tall and was slim in those days, it looked fantastic.

 My favorite style of men’s dress is English country clothing: shooting jackets, tweed suits, moleskins and cords.

 My favorite warm weather vacation is on the English Riviera: Dorset, Devon and Cornwall.

 I prefer a dry martini shaken, not stirred, at the St. James Hotel in London.

 The single piece of clothing I’ve had the longest is a ’30s double- breasted tan-colored leather motoring coat.

 My favorite album of all time is Billie Holiday “Lady in Satin.”

 I’ve just got into Agatha Christie’s “Murder on the Orient Express.”

 In the morning I love half a cold game bird from the night before, black coffee and the Times. Then I read and send some emails.

 My favorite hotel is the Grande Bretagne in Athens. Many happy memories.


 —Edited from an interview by Edward Helmore

Friday, 20 March 2026

Laurence Fellows (1885–1964) was a pioneering illustrator whose work in the 1930s and 1940s was crucial in defining modern male fashion illustration, particularly through his contributions to Apparel Arts (the precursor to GQ) and Esquire.

 


Laurence Fellows (1885–1964) was a pioneering illustrator whose work in the 1930s and 1940s was crucial in defining modern male fashion illustration, particularly through his contributions to Apparel Arts (the precursor to GQ) and Esquire. His illustrations were essential for shifting men's fashion away from simplistic advertising toward a sophisticated, detailed, and aspirational aesthetic that portrayed men as stylish, affluent, and at ease.

 

Importance of Fellows' Work:

Detailed Fabric and Texture Representation: Fellows was renowned for his ability to expertly depict the weight, texture, and drape of fabrics, including flannels, worsteds, tweeds, and linens, making the clothing the "star" of the image.

Creating "Casual Elegance": His art captured a specific, relaxed masculinity, showing men in comfortable, well-tailored clothes that were both refined and unstudied, setting a standard for "casual elegance".

Influencing Lifestyle Imagery: Instead of using underfed models, Fellows portrayed mature, dapper men in realistic, opulent settings—such as hosting parties, traveling, or at clubs—making the depicted lifestyle and fashion aspirational and accessible to readers.

Bridging Style and Fashion: During a time when many men had limited wardrobes, Fellows' work helped transform the focus from fast-changing trends to lasting personal style, highlighting the importance of well-fitting, classic pieces.

Enduring Legacy: His contributions were so significant that his 1930s illustrations remain a key reference for vintage menswear, with his work influencing contemporary interest in suits, tweed, and tailored looks. He was posthumously inducted into the Society of Illustrators Hall of Fame in 2009.

Fellows' work was particularly vital because of the limited supply of male fashion artists at the time, making his distinct style a dominant force in shaping how men's fashion was visualized and marketed during that era.