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May 18, 2026

The Bhambi’s Guide to the Boardroom, the Courtroom, and the Black-Tie Gala


Dressed for Every Room: The Definitive Occasion Dressing Guide | Bhambi’s Custom Tailors NYC
The definitive guide

Dressed for
Every Room

The boardroom. The courtroom. The black-tie gala. Three occasions. Three entirely different standards. One principle running through all of them.

Harry Bhambi May 2026 10 min read NYC · Midtown Manhattan

Every room has a dress code. Most of them are unwritten. A man who walks into a boardroom dressed for a gala has misread the room. A litigator who arrives in courtroom in a suit built for summer cocktails has undermined himself before he has spoken a word. The stakes attached to these moments are real — and they are decided, in part, by the quality of what you wear into them.

At Bhambi’s, we have been dressing New York’s executives, litigators, and statesmen since 1968. This guide is drawn from those fittings — the specific questions our clients ask when a room matters, and the answers that have served them well.

01
The boardroom

Power dressing
for the executive

The boardroom rewards authority expressed with restraint. Nothing loud. Nothing casual. Everything exact.

The boardroom is not a fashion show. It is a room in which decisions are made, capital is deployed, and judgments are formed — often in the first thirty seconds. Your suit should communicate that you belong at the table, that you pay attention to detail, and that nothing is accidental about how you present yourself.

The classic boardroom suit is a navy or charcoal worsted wool in a solid or very fine stripe. These are not defaults born of timidity — they are defaults born of tested results. Navy communicates authority without aggression. Charcoal reads as decisive and serious. Both hold their shape across a fourteen-hour day.

“The most powerful suit in any boardroom is the one nobody remembers — because they were too busy listening to the man wearing it.”

— Harry Bhambi
Boardroom outfit guide
Suit cloth
Navy or charcoal worsted wool, 280–320g. Fresco for warm offices. Fine chalk stripe is acceptable.
Brown, olive, loud plaid
Shirt
White or pale blue poplin or fine twill. Spread or semi-spread collar. French cuffs for high-stakes meetings.
Button-down collar, heavy checks
Tie
Silk in a solid, micro-pattern, or restrained stripe. Navy, burgundy, or deep green. Width matched to lapel.
Bold novelty prints, overly wide knots
Shoes
Black or dark brown Oxford or Derby. Polished. Cap-toe or plain-toe for the most formal contexts.
Loafers for investor meetings, suede in winter
Pocket square
White linen, flat fold or conservative puff. The quietest option is usually correct.
Bold colour that fights the tie
The bespoke advantage
A suit cut for your posture sits perfectly when you stand to address the room. Off-the-rack rarely survives that moment.

One detail our clients frequently overlook: the jacket must fit as well seated as standing. A boardroom suit spends hours in a chair. The back should lie flat, the collar should not gap, and the sleeves should allow comfortable movement without pulling. These are problems that only a bespoke suit, cut for how you actually sit, can solve reliably.

02
The courtroom

Authority,
precision,
credibility

Judges, juries, and opposing counsel are all watching. Your clothing must never be the reason they look twice.

The courtroom is arguably the most demanding dress context in professional life — and the most unforgiving. You are dressing for multiple audiences simultaneously: a judge who expects decorum, a jury who must trust you, and opposing counsel who will notice every deviation from the expected standard.

The rule in courtroom dressing is not elegance — it is invisibility. Your suit should be so correct, so precisely fitted, and so entirely free of distraction that no one thinks about it for a single moment. The jury should be focused on your argument. Your suit is there to ensure they are.

Navy and dark charcoal remain the consensus choices among trial attorneys for good reason: they read as serious and credible across every demographic in a jury box. A two-button, single-breasted suit in a 300-gram worsted is the workhorse of courtroom dressing. The fit must be immaculate — a jacket that pulls across the back or a trouser that breaks incorrectly will be noticed precisely when you cannot afford it to be.

“A trial attorney’s suit is a tool of persuasion. It should do its work quietly, and never require the jury to think about it.”

— Bhambi’s, on courtroom commissions
Courtroom outfit guide
Suit cloth
Dark navy or dark charcoal, 300–340g worsted. A slightly heavier weight maintains structure through a full trial day.
Light grey, bold patterns, anything shiny
Shirt
White only for trial. Crisp, well-pressed, spread collar. No visible monogram — understated is authoritative.
Coloured shirts during testimony, button-down
Tie
Solid or very fine stripe in navy, burgundy, or dark red. Conservative width. A well-made silk tie that sits flat.
Bold patterns, bow ties except at bench
Shoes
Black Oxford, highly polished. The standard for courtroom credibility across all federal and state courts.
Brown shoes, loafers, anything worn at heel
Fit notes
The jacket must allow you to button and stand without any pulling. Trouser break should be clean — no excess fabric to catch the eye.
Longevity
Trial attorneys wear their suits hard. A bespoke suit in a durable fresco or hopsack weave holds its shape and press far longer than finer cloths.

One note specific to New York litigators: federal courts, in particular, carry a dress expectation that is stricter than corporate environments. A suit worn to the Southern District of New York should be the most conservative piece in your wardrobe. This is not a context for expressing personality. It is a context for projecting competence, and the two are not the same thing.

03
Black tie & the gala

Evening
dressing
done correctly

Black tie is not an obstacle. In bespoke, it is an opportunity — to be the best-dressed man in any room without trying to be.

Black tie is the dress code that produces the most anxiety and the most errors in equal measure. Every man at a gala is wearing essentially the same uniform — yet the range of results is extraordinary. The difference between a man who looks like he belongs at a Metropolitan Opera opening and a man who looks like he rented something is not the garment category. It is the fit, the fabric, and the understanding of the rules.

The black tie rules are, in fact, simple — and they have not changed meaningfully in a century. A dinner suit in black or midnight navy barathea or a fine wool. A single-button jacket with peaked or shawl lapels faced in grosgrain or silk. A white marcella dress shirt with a fly front or covered placket. A black silk bow tie, hand-tied. Black patent or highly polished calf-leather Oxford shoes.

Where men consistently go wrong: the pre-tied bow tie (visible at every angle, and instantly recognisable), the wrong trouser break (evening trousers should sit slightly shorter than day trousers), and the mass-market dinner suit that has been let out and pressed rather than fitted correctly from the start.

“A bespoke dinner suit is the easiest commission we do — and the one that makes the most difference. Every other man is in the same black uniform. Fit is the only variable.”

— Lal Bhambi
Black-tie outfit guide
Dinner suit
Black or midnight navy barathea or fine wool. Single-button, peak or shawl lapel. Grosgrain or silk facing. Braid on trouser seam.
Navy blue (too casual), velvet unless formal seated dinner
Dress shirt
White marcella (piqué) or fine pleated front. Fly-front placket. Turndown or wing collar — turndown is more elegant for most events.
Regular dress shirts, coloured shirts, non-white
Bow tie
Black silk, hand-tied. This is non-negotiable. A slightly imperfect hand-tied bow reads as refined; a pre-tied bow reads as an afterthought.
Pre-tied at all costs. Novelty colours.
Shoes
Black patent leather Oxford or highly polished black calf. Opera pumps are correct for white tie; Oxford is the black-tie standard.
Brown shoes, suede, loafers
Pocket square
White silk, flat fold only. The pocket square at black tie is an element of the shirt, not an accessory. It should barely show.
Coloured or patterned pocket squares
The bespoke difference
A dinner suit cut to your proportions — the correct jacket length, the right amount of chest, the trouser sitting precisely at the waist — is immediately visible in a room full of rented alternatives.

One note on midnight navy: it is, in many ways, a superior choice to black for evening wear. Under artificial light — which is the light in which every gala, every opera box, every charity dinner takes place — midnight navy reads as a richer, more considered black. It is also marginally more forgiving when paired with a non-matched shirt or the inevitable variation in black accessories. Our fabric library holds several outstanding midnight navy baratheas that we recommend unreservedly for New York evening commissions.

Three rooms. Three rules. One constant.

Across every occasion, the variable that separates a man who commands a room from a man who merely occupies it is never the price of the garment. It is the fit. A $5,000 suit that does not fit correctly communicates less authority than a $500 suit that does. This is the premise on which bespoke tailoring has operated for centuries — and the reason it remains, in a world of shortcuts and approximations, entirely unreplaceable.

The ruleBoardroomCourtroomBlack tie
Fit above all else Seated & standing Standing to address Across a long evening
Invisible details Focus on the meeting Focus on the argument Focus on the person
Conservative cloth Navy / charcoal Dark navy / charcoal Black / midnight navy
No novelty accessories
Shoes polished Black Oxford Black Oxford only Patent or high-polish calf
White shirt preferredPale blue acceptable White only for trial White marcella

The most expensive mistake a man can make in any of these rooms is to treat the occasion as an opportunity for personal expression rather than professional communication. Expression has its place — in the lining of a jacket, in the choice of a fabric, in the small details that a tailor knows and a room does not. The exterior presentation should say: I understand where I am, and I belong here.

That understanding, expressed through cloth and cut, is what a Bhambi’s commission delivers. Not a formula — every client and every occasion is different — but a standard that has been applied, refined, and maintained for over fifty years.

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We accept a limited number of new commissions each season. Our atelier is at 14 East 60th Street, Midtown Manhattan — and we will dress you for every room that matters.

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Bhambi’s Custom Tailors · 14 East 60th Street, NYC
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author avatar
Harry Bhambi