Most men arrive at the fabric table knowing what they want. They have a color in mind, maybe a texture, possibly a mill name they encountered in a magazine. Then the bolts come out. The weight of proper suiting cloth between two fingers — the density of a good flannel, the nervous lightness of a Super 150s wool — and suddenly the mind opens. The choice turns out to be much larger, and more personal, than anyone expected.
We have been doing this for fifty-seven years at 14 East 60th Street. The fabric appointment is the part of the process most tailors rush; it is the part we refuse to. Every decision that follows — how a suit drapes, how it ages, whether it still earns its place in a wardrobe two decades from now — begins here, in the choice of cloth.
This guide captures what we walk every new client through. The fiber families. The weight question. The weave. The mills. And the appointment itself — what to say, what to feel, what to leave behind.
Start Here: The Four Variables That Decide Everything
Before you consider a single swatch, a master tailor will ask you four questions. The answers decide which corner of the room — and which of thirty thousand fabrics — is relevant to your commission.
1. What will you wear it for?
A suit for board meetings in midtown demands different cloth than a suit for a destination wedding in Tuscany in July, or a client dinner that begins at seven and rarely ends before midnight. The occasion shapes the fiber, the weight, the weave, and the color in ways that no amount of personal preference can override. A cashmere-silk blend, beautiful as it is, will not survive daily commuting. A heavy tweed, magnificent in February, will make you miserable in a July boardroom. Begin with the occasion. Everything else follows from it.
2. When and where will you wear it?
Season and climate are the fabric appointment’s north stars. New York’s summers are genuinely hostile — the kind of heat that has broken lesser suits by noon. Our winters demand cloth with real weight and real warmth. Air conditioning complicates both: an office kept at sixty-eight degrees year-round creates a man who needs a mid-weight wool in August and doesn’t necessarily need heavy flannel in January. Know your climate — not the city’s climate, yours.
3. How often will you wear it?
Frequency determines durability requirements. A suit worn twice a week needs different fiber characteristics than one reserved for quarterly board presentations. High-frequency wear calls for resilient weaves — a worsted wool, a twill, a fresco — that recover well, resist creasing under the pressure of daily life, and age gracefully with rotation and rest. Occasional-wear suits can afford finer, more delicate fabrics: a Super 150s, a silk-linen blend, something built for the impression rather than the mileage.
4. What do you want it to say?
Fabric carries register. A charcoal flannel says something different than a stone linen. A windowpane check in forest green and cream is a different statement than a plain navy hopsack. Neither is better. But there is always a right answer for a specific person in a specific life, and a master tailor’s job is to help you find it rather than default to what everyone else is choosing this season.
The Fiber Families: Wool, Linen, Cotton, Silk, and Their Blends
Wool — The Foundation
Ninety percent of the bespoke suits in our atelier are cut from wool, and the reasons are not sentimental. Wool breathes. It regulates temperature across a wider range than any other suiting fiber — warm when you need it, cool when you don’t. It recovers from creasing naturally, returning to shape with rest and steam. It holds dye with exceptional fidelity, producing colors that last. It ages in a direction: good wool, properly maintained, gets better over the decades, molding gradually to the wearer’s body in a way that synthetic fabrics cannot replicate.
Within wool, the variables are significant. Merino, cashmere, mohair, lambswool — each has its own handle, its own weight range, its own ideal application. The Super numbering system, described below, measures how fine the individual fibers are, which in turn determines the drape, the softness, and the durability of the finished cloth.
Linen — The Summer Choice
Linen’s reputation is accurate on both counts: it is extraordinarily breathable, and it wrinkles. A suit cut from pure linen will show the evidence of a morning meeting by early afternoon. For many clients, this is not a problem — the creasing of a well-made linen suit reads as relaxed rather than disheveled, provided the construction underneath holds its shape. For others, it is intolerable. Linen’s proper clients are men who understand the fabric’s character and choose it deliberately, not those who expect it to behave like wool.
The more practical option for New York summers is a linen-wool blend — typically sixty to seventy percent wool — which captures linen’s breathability while recovering far better from the day’s wear. It is what we recommend to most clients making their first warm-weather commission.
Cotton — Casual Authority
Cotton suiting occupies a specific register: smart-casual, city warm-weather, the kind of suit that works without a tie and holds its own at a dinner on a terrace. Hopsack weaves in cotton behave particularly well — the open weave breathes and drapes with a relaxed structure that positions the suit comfortably between formal and casual. Cotton wrinkles more than wool and less than linen, and its handling of heat, while good, doesn’t match linen’s genuine breathability.
Silk and Silk Blends — For Occasion
Pure silk suits are rare and special: luminous, impossibly light, built for evenings rather than days. More commonly encountered in a bespoke atelier is silk in blend — paired with wool to add luster and reduce weight, or with linen to temper the crease. A silk-wool blend in a mid-weight functions beautifully as a summer business suit in a city that keeps its offices cold. It drapes with a fluidity that straight wool cannot match, and the sheen is subtle enough to read as refined rather than formal.
Cashmere — The Long Investment
Cashmere is, by every measure, the most luxurious suiting fiber. The handle — the softness against skin — is without parallel. A cashmere suit, or a cashmere-wool blend at a high cashmere percentage, feels like nothing else in tailoring. It also demands the most care, tolerates daily wear least well, and commands a fabric price that reflects both its rarity and its character. We guide most clients toward cashmere for a second or third commission — something special, reserved, worn intentionally. Those who lead with it rarely regret it.
Understanding Fabric Weight
Fabric weight is measured in grams per linear meter (g/m or sometimes oz per yard) and is one of the most practically useful specifications a client can understand before entering the cloth room.
| Weight Range | Character | Best For | Season |
|---|---|---|---|
| 180–220 g/m Featherweight | Gossamer drape, almost liquid. Cool in extreme heat. | Resort travel, destination weddings, tropical climates | Summer / Destination |
| 240–270 g/m Lightweight | Light and crisp. Breathes well. Some structure. | City summer suiting, warm-weather business travel | Late Spring / Summer |
| 280–320 g/m Mid-Weight | The workhorse. Structure without weight. Year-round. | First bespoke suit, business suits, most commissions | Year-Round (Ideal) |
| 330–370 g/m Substantial | Visible weight, rich drape, warmth. | Autumn suits, cold-office winter wear | Autumn / Mild Winter |
| 380–440 g/m Heavy-Weight | Flannel, tweed, heavy overcoatings. Built for cold. | Winter suits, country wear, heavy-weather professional dressing | Winter |
The 280–300g range is where most first bespoke suits are cut, and for good reason. A mid-weight wool in this range survives New York’s seasons — manageable in summer, comfortable through autumn, adequate with appropriate layering in winter. It is the most forgiving weight for a man building his first bespoke wardrobe.
The Super Numbering System Explained
The Super designation — Super 100s, Super 120s, Super 150s — is among the most misunderstood specifications in bespoke tailoring, and among the most frequently misused by retailers. It refers to a single measurement: the fineness of the individual wool fibers, expressed in microns. Finer fibers produce softer, more draping, more lustrous cloth. They are also more delicate.
The practical lesson: a Super 120s or Super 130s offers the best balance of luxury and longevity for most bespoke commissions. Super 150s and above produces extraordinary cloth — soft in a way that is genuinely remarkable to the touch — but it requires careful handling, should not be worn daily without rotation, and is best reserved for suits that will be worn with intention rather than frequency. We recommend it to clients making their third or fourth commission, not their first.
“The finest number is not always the right number. A suit built to be worn is a different commission than a suit built to be admired.”
— Lal Bhambi, Founding Master Tailor, Bhambi’s Custom TailorsThe Mills: Where the Cloth Comes From
A bespoke suit is only as good as the cloth it is cut from. The world’s finest suiting fabrics come from a small number of mills whose reputations span generations — families and companies who have been weaving cloth for serious tailoring for over a century. At Bhambi’s, we hold stock from all of the following and guide every commission toward the right mill for the brief.
The standard-bearer for extraordinary softness. Loro Piana sources fiber at the finest end of the global supply — including the rarest vicuña and baby cashmere — and produces cloth with a handle that is unlike anything else available to tailoring. Their Super 150s and above represent the summit of what suiting cloth can be. For clients who want to touch something and understand immediately what bespoke is about, Loro Piana is where we begin.
English construction in its most authoritative form. Holland & Sherry’s twills, cavalry twills, and classic worsteds are built for the wear of professional life — structured, resilient, aging into themselves beautifully. Their classic navy fresco, their charcoal pinstripes, their estate tweeds: these are the cloths of bespoke tailoring as it has been practiced for nearly two centuries. When a client wants a suit that will outlive them, Holland & Sherry is where we look.
Scabal operates where luxury meets innovation. They produce performance fabrics — wools that travel without creasing, fabrics with genuine stretch woven into the construction — alongside more traditional weights for formal wear. For the executive whose wardrobe must work across time zones, or the client who needs a suit to function as hard as he does, Scabal’s performance collections are genuinely useful rather than merely technical.
French in its sensibility — a luster and fluidity to the drape that the English mills rarely match. Dormeuil’s Amadeus and Vanquish collections occupy the summit of the market alongside Loro Piana, producing cloth with a visual depth and movement that reads beautifully under the kind of lighting a New York evening demands. For a dinner suit, a significant occasion suit, or any commission where being remembered matters, Dormeuil is the cloth of choice.
The cloth of Neapolitan tailoring’s great houses — lightweight, unstructured, built for warmth rather than cold. Caccioppoli’s summer cloths in particular are extraordinary: linens, fresco wools, linen-cotton blends that drape with a relaxed, lived-in ease that heavier English cloths cannot replicate. For clients who dress with a Mediterranean sensibility — easy, confident, season-appropriate — Caccioppoli is the room to be in.
Zegna’s Lanificio produces cloth from the same family that built one of the world’s most recognized tailoring brands — and the fabric itself, separated from the ready-to-wear, is extraordinary. Their Trofeo wool, sourced from the finest Australian merino, produces cloth of rare consistency and luster. For clients who travel frequently and need cloth that holds up beautifully under the pressures of an international schedule, Zegna’s high-performance wools are among the most practical luxuries in the room.
The Weave: How Cloth is Constructed
Two suits can be cut from identical fiber, at identical weight, from the same mill — and look and behave entirely differently based on how the cloth was woven. The weave structure is not a secondary consideration; it determines the suit’s texture, its visual character, and its performance in wear.
Plain Weave — The Versatile Foundation
Each warp thread passes over and under each weft thread in alternation. The result is a dense, stable fabric that wears well, suits pattern (checks, stripes) cleanly, and ages evenly. Most business suiting begins here.
Twill — For Structure and Authority
The diagonal rib of a twill weave — familiar in serge and cavalry twill — gives the cloth a visible direction and a natural resilience. Twill suits hold their crease, resist abrasion, and communicate a certain formality of intent. The charcoal twill is among the most authoritative cloths in professional suiting.
Herringbone — Character with Restraint
A broken twill that produces a V-shaped, fish-bone pattern visible in the weave. At fine scale, herringbone reads as textured cloth with a subtle movement; at coarser scale, it is unmistakably a pattern. It adds visual interest without demanding to be noticed — the choice of a man who dresses carefully but does not need to be seen to be doing so.
Fresco — The Warm-Weather Professional
An open-weave worsted that breathes like no other business fabric. Fresco’s loosely twisted yarns create air pockets in the weave, making it feel genuinely light in warm conditions while maintaining the structure and authority expected of a professional suit. The cloth creases readily but springs back with movement — worn by men who are active, who move through a day, who need their suit to keep pace. Among New York’s summer fabrics, fresco is the master tailor’s recommendation more often than any other.
Flannel — Weight with Warmth
Lightly napped on one or both sides, flannel has a softness and warmth that no other wool weave replicates at the same weight. A charcoal flannel suit in November is among the most satisfying things a man can wear in this city — substantial, warm, authoritative, and aging in the most generous direction. Flannel is unambiguously seasonal; do not attempt a summer flannel. In its right season, nothing competes.
Color and Pattern: What Your Cloth Is Saying
Color is not purely an aesthetic choice in suiting cloth. It carries register, communicates intention, and works with or against the wearer’s coloring and skin tone in ways that a tailor will observe immediately. The guidelines are not rules — a great tailor will help any client break any of them with good reason — but they are useful starting points.
Navy and charcoal are the bedrock of a serious wardrobe, not because they are safe but because they work. Navy reads as authoritative without severity; charcoal as formal without coldness. Both absorb pattern well and hold their value across decades of wear. A first commission in navy or charcoal is money that will not be regretted.
Mid-grey and mid-brown open significant range without leaving professional territory. Earthy tones — olive, tobacco, warm stone — have grown in our fitting room over the past two years, driven by clients who have the navy covered and want to express something more particular about how they dress. These are the cloths of a second or third commission, building around the wardrobe rather than starting one.
Stripe, check, and pattern operate at a scale that determines register. A fine chalk stripe on charcoal is classical boardroom. A bold windowpane on camel is a confident choice that announces its maker. Herringbone in mid-scale sits comfortably between the two. The rule to carry out of the fabric room: pattern should be chosen for the suit’s primary context, not its most exciting possibility.
What Happens at the Fabric Appointment
The appointment begins with the conversation described at the top of this guide — occasion, climate, frequency, register. From there, our tailors pull a curated selection from stock, typically ten to fifteen cloths that answer the brief, rather than opening the entire room at once. This is deliberate. Choice is good; overwhelm is not.
You handle each cloth. The weight between your fingers is information that no photograph communicates. You hold it against your face — the tailors will guide this — to understand how the color interacts with your skin tone under natural light. You look at how a meter of it drapes when held loosely: this is how it will drape from your shoulder.
The conversation moves between practical and personal. A cloth that looks perfect in the bolt may not be right for how you sit, for how your shoulders carry load, for the lighting in the rooms where you are seen. The tailors are reading all of this simultaneously. Their job is not to find you a fabric you love in isolation — it is to find the fabric that will serve you most fully in the life the suit is being built for.
Most appointments conclude with two or three cloths under genuine consideration, a recommendation from the tailor, and a decision. Some clients know immediately, from the first bolt that lands on the table. Others need the full thirty minutes. Both are normal. There is no right speed at which to choose cloth that will last twenty years.
“Handle it. Hold it against your face. Drape a meter of it from your hand. The cloth is talking to you — the appointment is about learning to listen.”
— Harry Bhambi, Master Tailor, Bhambi’s Custom TailorsFrequently Asked Questions
The Fabric Room is Open
14 East 60th Street, Suite 610 · Midtown Manhattan · (212) 935-5379
Mon – Sat · Appointments preferred · Swatch requests available by phone