When ordering a custom suit, a man is confronted with an at times daunting variety of fabrics. While amount and fit are typically dictated by your body, you may select your suit's fabric in view of climate, occasion, and the image you hope to project. What follow is a introduction on textile terminology intended to demystify the world of suit fabrics.
For centuries now, large amount men’s suits have been completed out of wool. This faithful textile drapes beautifully, maintain its form reliably, and can be spun (from raw fiber into yarn) and woven (from yarn into fabric) to be lightweight and breathable, or to be hot and cozy. Worsted wool, from which most suits are prepared, goes through a concluding process that leaves it smooth and somewhat shiny.
Wool flannel is not completed the same way that worsted wool is, and it is therefore softer, even a little fuzzy. It can be heavy, for chill, or light, for spring, fall, and cooler summers.
For centuries now, large amount men’s suits have been completed out of wool. This faithful textile drapes beautifully, maintain its form reliably, and can be spun (from raw fiber into yarn) and woven (from yarn into fabric) to be lightweight and breathable, or to be hot and cozy. Worsted wool, from which most suits are prepared, goes through a concluding process that leaves it smooth and somewhat shiny.
Wool flannel is not completed the same way that worsted wool is, and it is therefore softer, even a little fuzzy. It can be heavy, for chill, or light, for spring, fall, and cooler summers.