Your fitter walks the whole journey with you — from first coffee and mood board to the final pinned hem — so the suit you wear on the day is the one you pictured from the start.
A custom wedding suit is cut to your exact measurements and built to your brief — fabric, lining, jacket length, lapel shape — so it fits you and reflects the tone of the day. Ready-to-wear pulls from a fixed set of sizes. It can work, but you're usually trading something on fit or detail.
Five to six weeks before the wedding is a comfortable minimum. That gives us real runway for fittings, any tweaks after the first try-on, and a final press — without feeling squeezed. Earlier is always better, especially in peak wedding season.
Yes — custom and bespoke are both on the table, depending on how personalized you want to go. Custom is cut and constructed off a block that's adapted to your measurements. Bespoke is patterned entirely from scratch, with more fittings and more freedom over structure and silhouette.
Yes — that's a big part of what your fitter is there for. We'll talk through venue, season, dress code, and the rest of the wedding party, then steer you toward fabrics, cuts, and details that make sense for the day. Nothing is decided before you're ready.
Yes — we cut suits for all of it. Black tie, destination ceremonies in heat, traditional church weddings, city halls. Warmer climates lean toward tropical wool, linen, or a hopsack weave; cooler weddings work beautifully in flannel or a heavier worsted.