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Guys, how many of you can honestly tell if somebody is wearing a quality suit?

spidercan

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Unless I can actually feel the fabric, or inspect it for hand-made buttonholes/sleeve head etc, I usually can't.


Sure some may point to the way it fits, but one can easily purchase a $8,000 Kiton in the wrong size, or a $150 slim fit Alfani that fits them perfectly. And quite honestly many Kitons are not very attractively cut anyway. I've heard of people saying a polyester suit's fabric just looks bad, but honestly without touching one I usually can't tell it apart from wool from a few feet away. The supposed "sheen" just isn't apparent to my eye, and who's it say it isn't a 90% wool 10% silk blend if it is shiny?

I think drape and lapel roll are the only legitimate way one can differentiate from sight. But honestly I feel like drape is such a nebulous description, and seriously raise your hand if you can really differentiate drape and aren't just BSing to make yourself sound good on teh stylefrvm.

So for me, I only look at lapel roll, and I'm not even completely confident with it. I have a Kiton with a horrible lapel roll that's worse than a $10 suit (or at least my fused polyester Armani), but I believe a really nice 3-2 roll can only be done with a hand sewn lapel and canvass.

Thoughts? Feel free to disagree

I have too much time on my hands, so just for kicks, can you guess from these photos? I realize these are static images vs moving IRL, and I'm probably making these extra hard :)

<$900 (ie cheap brands)
$1k-2K (designer fused suits such as Armani, D&G (there are no Lanvin by Caruso or Prada by Belvest etc))
>$3K (high end Styleforum approved, think Kiton, Attolini)


1)
700


2)
700


3)
700


4)
700


5)
700



6)
700


Bonus)
[
700


:foo:)
700
 
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minervau

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I agree with you in many respects. It's easy to see good fit, but that is not necessarily indicative of high-quality materials or construction (e.g., full canvas).

I think a few properties are characteristic of nice suits, and can be noticeable from far away:

1) Collar gap as a person moves or raises their arms -- I feel like only well-constructed "good" suits -- e.g., at least half-canvas -- will show little to no collar gap at all times as a person moves around. Even a well-fitted Alfani, to give one example, might look amazing when a person is robo-posing or with their arms at their sides, but will show collar gap when they reach up or even lift their arm for a handshake.

2) Lapel roll -- as you indicated.

3) Button holes or pick stitching -- It's not always the perfect thing to go by nowadays, when machines can basically emulate pick-stitching, but one still sees this more on high-end garments.
 

AlexE

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Distinguishing very cheap from expensive suits is often possible, e.g. by spotting
- Cheap plastic buttons!!!
- Bad optics of the lapel roll
- Terrible pattern matching in case of suits with stripes, windowpane etc.
- And in some cases the fabrics really look cheap

It gets tougher to visually distinguish different levels of quality once you reached a certain level, e.g. Canali vs. Zegna vs. Brioni
 

spidercan

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Nice. A couple points that were brought up that I didn't think of:
-pattern matching
-collar gaping (although I think this is more of a symptom of a low arm hole, another cheap suit indicator. Although even budget brands have been raising their armholes recently)

Seems like lapel roll is a common one.

Buttons: Can't say I completely agree with buttons, I pulled out my Isaia and Kiton suit and they both have pretty run-of-the mill plastic black buttons. Although I suppose if one were to have really nice horn buttons this would be a good indicator...but once again, I can't differentiate fake palstic horn from real horn unless it's up close (that being said I don't really have a discerning eye for buttons)

Keep it coming guys!
 
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spidercan

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:cry: I am shocked.


Ha you made me go through my closet. Two Armani Black label suits, and my Lanvin by Caruso have horn buttons. The Kiton and Isaia definitely plastic. Sartorio I have for sale looks like plastic, although there's sort of a horn looking design on the back, and Givenchy looks to have horn. So horn for designer, plastic for high-end Neapolitan. Go figure. Just never checked my buttons until you brought it up, but I'll take hand-sewn buttonholes over horn buttons any day :slayer:
 
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LaymanX

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Being surrounded by suits daily in the finance district, it's not that hard to tell after a while. Drape and fit are primarily what I look for. Most cheap suits have boxy, padded shoulders with low arm holes and are 'stiff' from the fusing.
 

in stitches

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you usually can just tell. if you cant, you need to handle more high end suits. oh i love how snobby that sounds. :)
 

spidercan

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Was about to mention this as well, can't think of any reason why a higher end maker would skimp on buttons.

Ah makes sense. The Isaia buttons do seem to have a bit more texture up close.
 
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JLibourel

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This is one of the more interesting threads of late. Other than nuances of fit, I am not sure I can differentiate, to tell the truth.
 

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