https://www.chrysalisengland.co.uk/contact
Chrysalis
Clothing has been manufacturing the finest quality Town and Country Outerwear
in their Corby factory in the heart of England
since 1985.
Advanced
technology is combined with the best of British tailoring to ensure that the
discriminating wearer is both dry and comfortable, whilst the garment retains
the cut, style and finish of a traditional tailored coat.
Each
Chrysalis garment is individually hand cut and made from the very best natural
fibres woven in the British Isles. Many of the styles are Teflon™ coated and
incorporate a waterproof and breathable membrane interliner for additional
warmth and protection.
The Chrysalis brand is supplied to the finest stores
worldwide and the Company is recognised as a leader in this highly specialised
field. How is traditional tweed clothing made?
Brought to
you by
William and
Son
Clare Thorp
18
SEPTEMBER 2018 • 11:45AM
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/luxury/british-craftsmanship/traditional-tweed-clothing/
By
investing in a country wear company, William & Son is breathing new life
into traditional British craftsmanship — and ensuring its luxury outerwear
boasts outstanding quality
Chris
Blackmore’s passion for tweed clothing started on the day he bought his
first-ever suit – a Harris tweed three-piece, back in 1966. “I got the bug from
that time onwards,” he says. “I still wear tweed suits today. I love the colours,
I love the touch, I love the finish and the individuality.”
Then
working for a tailor in London, he went on to start his own business creating
classic garments in the fabric he loved so much. More than 30 years later, the
company he founded, Chrysalis, is still producing the finest country and town
wear for stores and labels both in the UK and around the world.
It was the
passion Blackmore has for his craft, and his commitment to creating
high-quality British products using traditional methods, that led luxury-goods
company William & Son to employ him to create their own country wear. In
2013, he went on to buy the company’s factory in Corby, Northamptonshire as
part of vertical integration into the WRA Group.
Chrysalis
is one of several British manufacturers that the WRA Group has invested in as
part of its commitment to supporting British craftsmanship. “We’ve always
worked closely with British companies,” says William Asprey, chairman and
founder of William & Son. “There’s a very good reason for that, which is
that the quality is excellent, if not the best. We saw a real opportunity for
these businesses and felt that we could grow them.”
For Asprey
and William & Son’s chief executive Lou McLeod, buying Chrysalis made
perfect sense. “They are the best,” says McLeod. “Chris trained in Savile Row,
so his cut is excellent.”
As with
other manufacturers they have invested in, Chrysalis not only supplies William
& Son, but produces for other companies, too. “In an ideal world, we want
the factories to be flat out all year round,” says Asprey. “Chris has produced
for a lot of our competitors and they come back to him because he’s very good at
what he does. Men in the shooting field want practicality; they want comfort –
something that’s not restrictive.”
For
Blackmore, it means he can be confident that Chrysalis can carry on creating
the finest outdoor wear for many more years. “To have somebody who has a keen
interest and passion for what we do was great,” says Blackmore. “It means I can
look after the workforce and continue the traditions that we have here with all
the multi-skills the workers possess.”
In the
Corby factory, a team of 30 skilled artisans work to create the garments. “None
of our goods is mass-produced,” says Blackmore. “They’re all individually
hand-made and tailored from start to finish. That’s what makes us unique.”
The process
starts with the raw material, tweed, which is all sourced in the UK. “We buy
the finest tweeds for the purpose, sourced from mills in Scotland and
Yorkshire,” says Blackmore. “Our garments are British-made from British cloth.”
Tweed
manufacturing
Each piece
is hand-cut with shears from a pattern before the fabric is stabilised to make
it waterproof. Once it leaves the cutting room it then moves into the sewing
room, where three multi-skilled teams each work on different types of garments.
One team create waistcoats, gilets and breeks; another makes all the top coats,
such as classic racing coats with velvet collars. A third team is dedicated to
creating field coats – a timeless garment that the company has been making
since it started.
“We offer
it in 80 different tweeds and as many combinations as the customer decides to
choose,” says Blackmore. “We also offer a choice of linings and all sorts of
trims, so the customer can make the coat their own and know there’s nothing
else on the high street like it.”
Each field
coat has a breathable membrane inside to keep the wearer warm and dry. “It’s a
mixture of old traditions and new technology,” says Blackmore. Chrysalis swaps
in half a dozen new tweeds into its selection each year. “We’re always bringing
in fresh ideas, styles and fabrics, and I’m always looking at new patterns,
clothes and designs.”
William
& Son’s country wear combines functionality with luxury. “It’s still about
practicality, but we’ve added more style to it,” says McLeod. “We say ‘British
with a twist’.”
Whether
it’s updating a classic field jacket in a new colour or fabric, or investing in
a UK company such as Chrysalis, it’s about breathing new life into British
traditions – and ensuring that luxury products made in this country continue to
be revered around the world.
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