All posts tagged: suiting

17 Best Travel Blazers for Men in 2026: Travel in Style

17 Best Travel Blazers for Men in 2026: Travel in Style

I’ve always liked wearing a blazer when I travel—not because I think I might get upgraded for looking so put-together (a persistent menswear fantasy that as far as I know has never actually happened), but because when you travel, a roomy blazer just makes practical sense. The pockets and ease-of-layering alone are worth it, but there’s also something reassuring about wearing a proper jacket amid the debasement of modern air travel. (And of course, it also harkens back to ever-inspirational 90s airport style.) And even though I’d rather wear a blazer than fold it into my bag, with the right travel blazer, packing it down is no longer a gamble. The best ones look like normal tailoring, but are built from fabrics that bounce right back into shape, whether they’ve been crammed into an overhead bin, folded into a carry-on, or sandwiched into a middle seat on a red-eye. The trick, as always, is to keep things reasonably classic in cut, colour, and overall vibe. Get that right, and your travel blazer will work just …

Cillian Murphy Is Still a Pro at Subtle Red-Carpet Suiting

Cillian Murphy Is Still a Pro at Subtle Red-Carpet Suiting

Some guys like to treat the red carpet like a whole performance, but Cillian Murphy does the exact opposite. The man just turns up, stands still, and somehow steals the room. At the world premiere of 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple in London on Thursday, he reminded everyone that, sometimes, holding back is the biggest flex. On the red carpet, the Irish national treasure calmly and quietly pulled up in a double-breasted gray suit from Anglo-Italian, a label based in Marylebone, London. Crafted in Italy, the suit was built with soft shoulders, and sharp, fanged-out lapels, plus some nice tortoiseshell buttons. The cloth itself was a vintage-looking nailhead flannel woven by Fox Brothers in Somerset, England. It’s all very wintery, all very serious, and all very Murphy. Cillian Murphy, wearing a suit by Anglo-Italian, at the 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple premiere on Tuesday in London. Samir Hussein/Getty Images Underneath, he went with a black turtleneck (also by Anglo-Italian, FYI). No collars, no ties, no unnecessary layers—just clean lines and a bit of …

Alex Mill Cooper Suit Review: One of the Best Affordable Casual Suits, Period

Alex Mill Cooper Suit Review: One of the Best Affordable Casual Suits, Period

Everyone loves a good suit—this isn’t exactly breaking news—but over the last few seasons, I’ve been thinking about how to better weave them into my wardrobe rotation. Recently, my menswear third eye was pried open with the collective realization that maybe, just maybe, we could treat a suit like a sweatsuit. Before the menswear denizens gather their pitchforks and declare me a heretic, I kindly ask that you hear me out. A sweatsuit’s true versatility doesn’t come from wearing it head-to-toe; it shines when it’s split up—a hoodie with cargos, a fleece with sweatpants. Apply that same logic to tailoring, and suddenly the suit feels far more approachable. Sure, it still works with a necktie, but the dandy contingent won’t clutch their pearls if you wear it with a T-shirt, either. What I look for in a suit is pretty simple: it needs to come in navy or heather charcoal (maximum bang for my bucks), lean classic-to-relaxed in fit, and hopefully clock in under $1,000. I’ve trusted New York label Alex Mill before, whether it …