Summer tailoring is almost an entire menswear genre of itself, distinctly separate from the tailoring that we tend to wear the rest of the year. Soft linen fabrics, unstructured silhouettes, colours that aren't navy or charcoal - summer tailoring has an altogether more relaxed appeal, like an extension of our casualwear wardrobes, only with lapels. They're designed to be worn in a laidback way that doesn't presuppose the combination of a classic shirt and tie, but looks equally at home if you want to more formal. If a dress code isn't a problem, then we love pairing our unstructured suits with soft-collared polo shirts or tees for more of a chic resort vibe that you can wear with lo-fi sneakers, loafers, or sandals.

Tailoring has long existed on the formal end of the menswear spectrum - at least in most people's minds - but it hasn't actually always been the case. The British were some of the first to take the classic blazer silhouette and mix it with sportswear. Think of the rowing blazers of the mid 19th century - these were used as warm-up jackets by Oxbridge oarsmen, who then had the sheer audacity to wear them to social events too! And thus a trend was formed. From there, the blazer's relationship with sportswear became lifelong, with players of those most noble of sports - cricket and tennis - choosing to don the softly tailored (and sometimes knitted) blazer atop their respective whites.
