![]() The Massimo Dutti overshirts are soft, but they also lack body - they feel flimsy. More importantly, rather like leather shoes, cheaper skins often involve compromises on the integrity of the skin, such as splits rather than full grain. Having worked on a few suede and leather products (at Connolly and Cromford) I would avoid these pieces, because I know how much good leather - such as the nappa referred to here - costs. The current range includes black and brown quilted jackets, as well as a suede overshirt with a detachable vest, with prices £269-£299. Given the ‘ Italian Smooth ’ aesthetic at Massimo Dutti, it’s no surprise that there is a lot of leather and suede outerwear. I know that applies to a lot of readers today. When I could afford most things in there, but sought out deals on luxury brands whenever I could. ![]() It’s somewhere I used to shop from when I was starting my career. I picked Massimo Dutti because while definitely a high-street brand, they have a good classic-menswear aesthetic: brown-suede shoes and stone chinos, blue shirts and navy knitwear. I spent a happy couple of hours wandering around Massimo Dutti on Regent Street, and working out what I would and wouldn’t buy. In order to give concrete, if partial answers to these questions, I thought I’d conduct an experiment. This, of course, was part of the subject of my book The Finest Menswear in the World, which examined what constitutes ‘quality’ in various categories of clothing.īut what about when you’re not looking at the finest things? When it’s a choice between buying a £100 sweater from the high street, or saving for a £250 Scottish one?Īre you better saving money on underwear and other basics, or are those precisely the things you should be spending on, given you wear them every day? When is it worth buying the best possible quality, and when can you economise?
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