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James Sherwood's Discriminating Guide to London is a very
21st-century comment on city style. Sherwood, author of a number of
definitive publications on English sartorial style, is the
quintessential man-about-town. This is a selective and opinionated
guide informed by superlative taste, direct experience and many
years of partaking in the very best that the world's most exciting
metropolis has to offer. The book is inspired by a 1970s
publication of the same name by another James Sherwood - no
relation - who is today the owner of the Orient-Simplon Express and
luxury hotels and restaurants around the world. He contributes a
foreword.
The skilled tailors of Savile Row in Mayfair, central London, have
dressed kings, movie stars, rock legends, billionaires - and even a
few regular guys. A Savile Row suit remains an enduring and highly
individual symbol of the finest a man can buy. From its origins
close to Britain's main royal palaces, the Row has grown from
clothing aristocrats to military men; more recently it has been
revivified by the renewed appreciation of personalized, handmade
goods, and by a new generation of modern sartorialists seeking
'heritage luxury'. Told through eight chronological themes, this
beautifully illustrated celebration brings together Savile Row's
highlights and low-lifes, the dramas and private tales, the suits
and their accoutrements, the fabrics and the cuts, the history and
future, as never before. Each chapter charts a stage of the Row's
development and its contribution to men's fashion and culture.
Throughout the book are dispersed 26 profiles of today's master
tailors, providing insight into what makes their work,
relationships and clothes so special. The book is finely detailed
with reference sections on the anatomy and making of the perfect
suit. This once-in-a-lifetime publication, by the archetypal modern
gentleman and devoted customer of the Row, weaves a fabric rich
with anecdote, personality and sartorial detail.
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The Perfect Gentleman (Hardcover)
James Sherwood; Foreword by Terence Stamp; Photographs by Andy Barnham, Guy Hills
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R722
Discovery Miles 7 220
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This lavish publication celebrates the gentleman's search for the
perfect sartorial detail, the ideal accessory, or beautiful gift
for a loved one. Presented through the eyes of a connoisseur
looking for quality and bepoke goods in London's key stylistic
historic periods, it tells the stories of the personalities,
shop-keepers and mastercraftsmen who have animated the business of
luxury goods for centuries. The book is arranged chronologically in
six chapters, each followed by three or four profiles of British
luxury marques. A reference section presents the London gentleman's
social world, from the shopping arcades to classic hotels and the
member's clubs and antiquarians in between. This is the perfect
book for the man who has everything.
Men's jewelry has a long and fascinating history, with storied
houses, famous patrons and a diverse range of modern designers.
Behind each tiny piece often lies a complex narrative of patronage,
personality and craftsmanship. This is the first publication
dedicated solely to a neglected subject. Drawing on his expertise
on men's style and insider's knowledge of the jewelry industry,
men's style aficionado James Sherwood tells the story of men's
relationship with jewelry and presents the contemporary artisans
who keep the art alive. Through thematic chapters, works by key
jewelers are profiled and richly illustrated, including pieces by
Tiffany & Co., David Yurman, Cartier, Boucheron and Ara
Vartanian. Hundreds of exquisite photographs, many specially
commissioned, of rings, cufflinks, studs, pins, slides, bracelets,
chains and pendants chart changing fashions and evolving attitudes
to men's jewelry over the centuries. Pieces by great craftsmen and
-women and the patrons who commissioned them, from the Maharaja of
Kashmir to David Bowie, are brought to life through vivid texts and
contemporary and archival portraits. This sumptuous guide to
sartorial elegance sets men's jewelry in its proper historical and
cultural contexts, offering an unexpected resource for jewelers and
a trove of inspiration for anyone who wears, gifts or simply
admires men's jewelry.
Known as the founding tailor of Savile Row, Henry Poole & Co.
has been dressing the world's most important men and women for over
two centuries. Their craft of bespoke tailoring has been
meticulously documented through the generations in a complete set
of ledgers. Telling the story of Poole's most colourful characters
in six chapters, this fascinating account distills Sherwood's
research into sixty iconic customers, men and women. Each client is
profiled with details of their signature garment and connections
with Poole's. From artists and writers, such as Henri de
Toulouse-Lautrec and Wilkie Collins, to financiers J. P. Morgan and
Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild, this book offers a unique window
into an establishment at the very heart of 19th- and 20th-century
public life. Illustrated with historic portraits and atmospheric
photography of the premises as they are today, this intimate
glimpse into the private lives of some of history's most
influential figures is essential reading for anyone interested
Savile Row, the relationship between power and being well-dressed,
and the evolution of style.
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