As a classic car collector, investor or trader, do you have access to the latest tax, accounting and financial advice?
We have a reputation for advising high net worth individuals, and owners of classic and high performance cars, on the tax advantages and implications of investing in such Investingvehicles.incars,
if structured correctly, can be extremely tax efficient as capital growth is free of Capital Gains Tax. However, where an investor is not domiciled in the UK, and wishes to structure more substantial inward investment into classic cars, this can be arranged so that the funding may not be treated as remittance of taxable foreign income or gains.
We have a wealth of experience assisting clients, whether they are a passive investor and collector of classic cars or an active trader or participator in the classic car or motorsport sector more generally.
If you would like to discuss the structure of any investments in alternative assets, including classic cars, please contact:
Neil Lancaster, Private Client Partner Blick Rothenberg
T: +44 (0)20 7544 8793
E: neil.lancaster@blickrothenberg.com
Timetable
Main Stage: Wednesday June 15
10:00 Music
10:20 Music
10:40 Music
11:00 Gaziano & Girling: Bespoke shoe-making
11:20 Patrick Grant, Norton & Sons director
11:40 Music
12:00 The €135m Mercedes-Benz: RM Sotheby’s on auctioning the most expensive car ever sold
12:20 Sustaining craft skills through generations, with Dominic Taylor-Lane, AoHE
12:40 Swing Ninjas band
13:00 David Gandy in conversation
13:20 Re-making an original: Continuation cars with David Moore of Envisage Group
13:40 Swing Ninjas band
14:00 Jeremy Hackett, JP Hackett founder
14:20 Cici Muldoon and Daisy Knatchbull
14:40 Swing Ninjas band
15:00 Bentley Mulliner: The rebirth of bespoke
15:20 Bizzarrini’s Simon Busby with Simon Taylor
15:40 Swing Ninjas band
16:00 Neville Swales, Building The Legend founder
16:20 Jonathan Wells, Morgan head of design
16:40 Swing Ninjas band
17:00 Czinger: The 3D-printed hypercar
17:20 Everrati: Electrifying the classics
17:40 Swing Ninjas band
18:00 Swing Ninjas band
18:20 Ella Podmore MBE on hybrid McLaren Artura
18:40 Technology meets Italian design: FOPE’s take on men’s fine jewellery
19:00 Swing Ninjas band
19:20 Swing Ninjas band
19:40 Swing Ninjas band
20:00 Close
Main Stage: Thursday June 16
10:00 Music 10:20 Music
10:40 Music
11:00 Ella Podmore MBE on hybrid McLaren Artura
11:20 The €135m Mercedes-Benz: RM Sotheby’s on auctioning the most expensive car ever sold
11:40 Music
12:00 City Lions Youth Judging with Hagerty starts
12:20 Jacky Ickx in conversation with Simon Taylor
12:40 Swing Ninjas band
13:00 Marek Reichman, Aston Martin chief creative officer
13:20 Technology meets Italian design: FOPE’s take on men’s fine jewellery
13:40 Swing Ninjas band
14:00 Gaziano & Girling: Bespoke shoe-making
14:20 Jonathan Wells, Morgan head of design
14:40 Swing Ninjas band
15:00 Czinger: The 3D-printed hypercar
15:20 Savile Row: Interview with leading tailors
15:40 Swing Ninjas band
16:00 Scabal: 50 years on the Row
16:20 Everrati: Electrifying the classics
16:40 Swing Ninjas band
17:00 Cici Muldoon: Cars, physics and ballet
17:20 Neville Swales, Building The Legend founder
17:40 Swing Ninjas band
18:00 Swing Ninjas band
18:20 Sustaining craft skills through generations, with Dominic Taylor-Lane, AoHE
18:40 Hawthorne & Heaney on ‘innovation in craft’
19:00 Swing Ninjas band
19:20 Swing Ninjas band
19:40 Swing Ninjas band 20:00 Close
Essential information
Where to go
Food and drink on Savile Row
Visitors are free to roam around all the cars on display (please do not touch them)
Most of the tailors will be open to visit
Talks and live music on the central stage
Heritage engineering displays on Savile Row
Motoring art display at The Service, 32 Savile Row
The Service, coffee shop and café, 32 Savile Row
Sartoria, Italian restaurant, 20 Savile Row
Nearby food and drink
Sabor, Spanish tapas restaurant and bar, 35-37 Heddon Street
Heddon Street Kitchen, European brasserie, 3-9 Heddon Street
Starbucks, coffee house, 6A Vigo Street
Cecconi’s Mayfair, Venetian-inspired restaurant and cocktail bar, 5A Burlington Gardens
Burlington Arms, pub with lunchtime dining, 21 Old Burlington Street
Ralph’s Coffee and Bar London, cocktails, coffee and light American fare, 173 Regent Street
Stork, pan-African restaurant, 13-14 Cork Street Morris’s Café, sandwiches, pastries and coffee, 15B Clifford Street
Sarap London, Filipino cuisine, 10 Heddon Street
Piccolino, Italian restaurant, 21 Heddon Street
The Wolseley, elegant dining with art deco glamour, 160 Piccadilly
Other attractions
Event information
Royal Academy of Arts, galleries, café and restaurant, Burlington Gardens
Hauser & Wirth, art gallery, 23 Savile Row
Pilar Corrias, art gallery, 2 Savile Row
You’ll find event officials in Concours on Savile Row polo shirts around the stage area
Welcome...
...to Concours on Savile Row, where luxury car design and bespoke tailoring meet
ON BEHALF of The Pollen Estate, we would like to welcome you to the first-ever Concours on Savile Row event. We are delighted that you are here to experience the two worlds of bespoke tailoring and luxury automotive design that share so many parallels and historic partnerships.
Savile Row tailors have a longstanding relationship with the automotive industry, having created everything from driving suits and driving jackets to car interiors. What propels this relationship are the attributes that the collector car world and custom tailoring share: workmanship, beautiful design, high-quality materials, attention to detail and extremely discerning customers. Over the course of the two-day Concours on Savile Row, we will witness a wonderful showcase of craftsmanship that is at the heart of both industries.
We hope you enjoy this oneof-a-kind car collection and take a moment to wander inside the
tailoring houses and retailers to truly experience Savile Row and the craftspeople who make it so very special. Thank you for visiting Concours on Savile Row.
We would like to thank Hothouse Media, Westminster City Council, Savile Row Bespoke Association, New West End Company and all the participating manufacturers, sponsors, tailors and retailers. Without their support, this event would not be possible.
Julian Stocks Property director, The Pollen EstateWelcome...
...from the founders of Hothouse Media, Concours on Savile Row organiserWE ARE delighted to welcome you to the very first Concours on Savile Row. We hope you like what you see.
The first idea to match a selection of the world’s greatest automobiles with the world’s greatest tailors on this world-famous road came about in 2019, after a chance conversation about connections between tailors and cars. A plan was hatched... Unfortunately, Covid had other plans, which put paid to two years of potential Concours. But, third time lucky, here we are.
You might ask why there are connections between tailors and cars. The common factor can be summarised in one word: ‘bespoke’. For well over 200 years, tailors here have created bespoke clothing for the most discerning individuals. And for more than 120 years, manufacturers and coachbuilders have made bespoke cars for those who wanted something di erent.
As the publisher of Magneto magazine, we are well acquainted with the world of collector cars, and we’ve always had an appreciation for the skills of tailors. The Concours has given us the chance to work with
them, along with The Pollen Estate and Westminster City Council. All have supported the event from the start, as have our sponsors and partners: RM Sotheby’s, FOPE, Hagerty and Chopard.
If you enjoy the event as much as we hope you will, then their hard work will have been worth it.
Geo Love Managing director David Lillywhite Editorial directorAutomotive and tailoring collaborations; the synergy between luxury brands
The tailors who provide beautiful bespoke clothing along with a fine service
Association of British Heritage Engineers; keeping the dream alive
Concours on Savile Row is organised in partnership with The Pollen Estate c/owww.thepollenestate.comshona.price@knightfrank.com
Public relations partner
Alpha hello@alphakilo.comwww.alphakilo.comKilo
Logistics partner
Historic richard@historicpromotions.comwww.historicpromotions.comPromotions
Motoring art partner
Historic Car sales@historiccarart.netwww.historiccarart.netArt
Event organiser
Hothouse Media Ltd, Castle Cottage, 25 High Street, Titchmarsh, Northants NN14 info@hothousemedia.co.uk3DF
Managing director Geoff Love
Editorial director David Lillywhite
Advertising
Sue Farrow and Rob Schulp
Managing editor Sarah Bradley Art director Peter Allen
Writer Nathan Chadwick
Printed by The Manson Group
Great care has been taken throughout this programme to be accurate, but the publisher cannot accept any responsibility for any errors or omissions that might occur. The editors and publishers of this programme give no warranties, guarantees or assurances, and make no representations regarding any goods or services advertised in this edition.
What
Where
RICHARDJAMES
THE SERVICE
Lifestyle coffee shop and marketplace where motoring artists will be live-painting and selling their work
SKILLSHERITAGEDEMOS
See craftsmen at work along the Row, specialising in engineering, trimming, horology,andmetal-sculptingtailoring
Ex-HQ for The Beatles’ firm, on the rooftop of which the band played its final public gig, on January 30, 1969
DRAKE’SDEGE&SKINNER CORPSEX-APPLEHQ
PILARCORRIASARTGALLERYARTHURSLEEP
CAD&THEDANDY
The art of bespoke
How the worlds of tailoring and luxury cars both use techniques honed over hundreds of years to produce the finest creations money can buy
MORE THAN ever before, the art of bespoke has become integral to the lives of many. We all want something that bit different, that bit special – and perfectly designed to our own unique needs. It could be furniture, it could be houses, it could be bicycles or, most pertinently for all of us at the Concours on Savile Row, it could be tailoring or cars...
It’s the former that has the longest history: from the Middle Ages until the advent of sewing machines at the end of the 18th century, clothes were made by hand, with tailors producing high-quality work that still stands up to scrutiny today. There was no such thing as mass-market, ready-to-wear clothing, so the less well-off relied upon hand-made secondhand items andByhand-me-downs.theVictorianera, tailoring was thriving worldwide – and nowhere
more so than in London, the so-called capital of the free world at the time. The city’s West End teemed with tailors, and although sewing-machine use became more widespread, much of the capacity for machine-made (but still labour-intensive) clothing was initially taken up by the manufacture of military uniforms.
By the late 19th century machinemade everyday clothes had become more available, but bespoke clothing continued to be the more desirable option well into the 20th century. Suits in particular were mostly handmade until the 1960s, when a technique known as fusing – using adhesive to bond the interlining to the outer material – became widespread in machine-made suits.
Initially, fusing would result in a stiffer, less fitted suit, but gradually the techniques improved, while the fashions of the 1960s and ’70s moved
further away from formal wear. It seemed as though tailoring was in trouble, and many great names were lost during the following decades.
The 2000s, though, have seen a great revival, as the demand for unique, high-quality, sustainable clothing and accessories for both men and women reach new levels. Over the past few years in particular, tailoring has seen a resurgence. Many tailors have introduced new materials and innovative ways of attracting fresh customers – even to the point of sending out measuring ‘robots’ to overseas clients during the pandemic lockdowns. Covid was tough on the bespoke industry, which generally requires face-to-face engagement, but it’s bouncing back in 2022.
The automotive world has followed a similar trajectory. When the motor car noisily announced its arrival in the late 1800s, hundreds of makers
sprang up, working from barns and backstreet workshops, producing extremely low numbers. Virtually every model was different, but within three decades cars became available to the masses, thanks to the likes of the Model T Ford and Austin Seven.
At the thoroughbred end of the market, though, most companies tended to sell a rolling chassis, to be topped by bodywork of the customer’s choice from any one of hundreds of coachbuilders around the world. Styles and prices varied wildly, and clients were able to take wild flights of fancy should they dare. The most
discerning of them would turn to the coachbuilders of mainland Europe, especially Italy and France. They might be paying over $5000 for the rolling chassis alone, 100 years ago; at least twice the price of a typical family house at the time. The bodywork and interior could easily cost much more than the chassis, particularly once the Art Deco era began to influence automotive style.
Later, as the auto makers adopted more modern types of construction after World War Two, so the coachbuilders began creating special versions of production cars – usually convertibles and coupés that factories weren’t equipped to cope with.
By the 1970s, however, largely thanks to new production methods that had originated in Japan, the major automotive manufacturers no longer needed to turn to outside coachbuilders. As a result, many old
names went out of business, with the rest surviving as design houses.
Fast forward into the 2020s, and the luxury car market is once again all about ‘bespoke’. Buyers can specify unique finishes and specs, and hypercars are being built not just in low volume but sometimes with special-order one-off bodies, often in carbonfibre or brand-new composites. The arrival of all-electric ‘platforms’ means there will be more of a chance than ever for unique bodywork to be created.
In both automotive and tailoring, customers are now able to get involved in the creative process; maybe throw in a few personal style references or make real a design that they’ve had in their head for years. It really is like a return to the early days of both worlds – only this time with more thought for ethics, sustainability and future-proofing.
THERE’S A long history of collaborations between the tailors of Savile Row and motor manufacturers, and the Concours on Savile Row will continue this tradition with several very special, all-new examples of cars, suits, shoes and jewellery.
Of all the well known recent collaborations between tailors and automotive marques, one of the most enduring is the ongoing tie-in between JP Hackett and Aston Martin. Hackett Aston Martin jackets in particular have been incredibly successful – and Hackett has even outfitted the Formula 1 team’s drivers Sebastian Vettel and Lance Stroll.
Then there’s the lambswool jacket fabric created in 2020 by Henry Poole & Co to commemorate the Range Rover’s 50th anniversary. The fabric was inspired by the exterior colours of the original 1970 car: Tuscan Blue, Bahama Gold and Davos White,
which were also revisited for the limited-edition Range Rover Fifty. Last year also saw Norton & Sons produce a driving jacket for Lotus.
At the Concours, Cad & The Dandy will be creating a bespoke suit for the F1 and Le Mans 24 Hours legend Jacky Ickx, who will be attending the event representing timing partner Chopard. Look out for Jacky on the stage, speaking of his many racing exploits – including his infamous slow walk across the Le Mans track in 1969 in protest at the dangerous racing-start tradition.
Meanwhile, at Dege & Skinner, Morgan will be showing a special edition of its new Super 3 threewheeler, with the interior retrimmed by the tailor itself. The Super 3 was only released earlier this year yet has already attracted record orders, so this will be a rare chance to view one close-up – and the first chance to see the Dege & Skinner version.
Italian jewellery maker FOPE, a major sponsor of the Concours, has fashioned three limited-edition (and numbered) Savile Row versions of its Flex’it bracelets, from the FOPE Panorama range. They’ll be sold for between £6480 and £7660 each.
Several further Savile Row specialists will also be working with the automotive marques – including shoemaker Arthur Sleep, which is creating a special driving shoe for the Concours. Watch out for more!
workingCollaborative
The Concours celebrates the synergy between automotive marques and tailors with some very special items
LEFT AND BELOW
Previous tie-ups between tailors 50ththeRoverofinspiredHenryjacketofincludemanufacturersthecreationalambswoolfabricbyPoole&Co,bythepainttheoriginalRangetocelebrateiconicmodel’sanniversary.
The Association of Heritage Engineers
The Concours on Savile Row is as much about how the beautiful clothing and cars are created as it is about the end results, and within the tailors’ premises there will be plenty of demonstrations of how the suits are made.
To balance that, Savile Row will be home for the two days to the Association of Heritage
aspects of automotive and tailoring, while the instrumentation work links closely with the arts of horology and watchmaking.
The Association has brought on board four of its members to work throughout event: Martin Greaves from historic car-restoration and race-preparation specialist Classic trimmerEngineering;PerformancetraditionalHarryFraser;
upholstery, metal-fabrication and sculpture specialist
Toby Southan of Southan Industries; and horologist
SethBeKennedy.suretolook out for the four skilled engineers in action on Savile Row, and also please do find time to talk with Dominic Taylor-Lane about the opportunities available within heritage engineering. www.associationof heritageengineers.co.uk
SustainabilityonSavileRow
From materials to longevity to recyclability, the worlds of classic cars and fine tailoring are equally eco aware
THE ULTIMATE in product sustainability is long life – and that’s what both classic cars and Savile Row tailoring are all about.
The first of these examples is clear: it often takes as much energy to make a car in the first place as said vehicle uses in its lifetime, and then there are the raw materials to consider on top of that. So many classics will have been through periods during which they have been used rather than being scrapped and replaced by a newer model. And keeping them in the best condition is usually entrusted
to local craftsmen using age-old skills.
But tailoring? Perhaps it is not immediately obvious – until you consider that tailored suits are intended to last for generations, handed down from one to the next. Unlike fast-fashion items they are made to last, and are constructed in a way that allows the tailors to adjust them up to three sizes either way –allowing a Savile Row suit to be adapted to your changing body shape.
Just as importantly, the materials used are always sourced from recognised, ethical suppliers. The
tailoring process is usually local, in workshops either on the Savile Row premises or nearby, using skilled staff who are adept at the most efficient use of the cloth. Any leftovers tend to be donated to fashion schools, and most materials are recyclable anyway; many are also naturally sourced.
Even the tailoring process itself has a low carbon footprint, because so much of it is by hand. The majority of tailors make use of sewing machines only for areas that require extra reinforcement, with a typical example being just 20 minutes of sewing-machine use for a suit that takes 60 hours or more to create.
In both industries, the traditional skills required are being passed down to new generations via apprenticeship schemes and in-house training.
Speak with the tailors and with representatives of the Association of Heritage Engineers at the Concours to find out more on learning these crafts.
OFFERED FOR SALE
WestminsterCityLions
THE WESTMINSTER City Lions is the council’s fun and innovative scheme to help 1316-year-olds find out how to get involved in cultural and creative opportunities happening in the borough, working alongside parents, schools and local businesses.
At the Concours on Savile Row the City Lions will be meeting and spending time with the tailors, to learn about the many different roles and skills required, in order to give them an insight into the industry. In addition, the City Lions will not only be able to look around the classic cars but also experience how to judge them, thanks to the support of insurance specialist Hagerty’s Youth Judging Program. This was first introduced in 2007 and is now hosted at more than 100 classic car and boat events throughout the US, Canada and the UK.
Designed primarily for 8-14-yearolds, the Youth Judging Program is
intended to bring the world of classics to a fresh, younger audience. These new judges are guided through the show field as a group, to pre-selected show cars. They interact with owners, allowing the judges to learn details, history and facts about each entry. A score card that highlights five basic categories, rated on a scale of one to five, is used, which is supplied as part of a Youth Judging kit.
The City Lions will be guided around the Concours cars by Hagerty’s Dan Cogger and organiser David Lillywhite on the Thursday of the event. They will talk with the owners where available, and examine the classics along the way. With score cards marked, the Youth Judges’ winning car will be announced on the stage in the afternoon.
This is just one way in which the City Lions interact with local events. Past experiences have included film premières, live sports events and interactive workshops, with a real
emphasis on talking with the experts about starting a creative career. By joining City Lions, youngsters can gain exclusive access to Westminster’s most inspiring cultural organisations, and get the chance to boost their CVs by taking part in talks, workshops and work placements with some of the biggest names in the creative industries.
To find out how to get involved, whether you are a pupil, a teacher or involved in a local business or organisation, visit www.citylions.org.
We welcome Westminster City Lions as they discover tailoring, collector cars and the art of concours judging
LEFT AND ABOVE
City Lions scheme puts youngsters in touch with the creative industries. The Concours will allow them to get up close to classic cars as well as to meet Savile Row tailors.
Motoring art displays
No car show is complete without great motoring art, and for the Concours on Savile Row we have plenty for you to see, with two artists working live plus a special display at The Service café at 32 Savile Row.
The motoring art is courtesy of Historic Car Art. The company trades in renowned automotive art of all ages, including vintage posters, and represents around 70 artists.
Many
started out as a freelance artist in the 1980s painting mainly onvisualand2008gamesandillustrationslandscapes,forpublishingpet-portraitcommissions.Hebecameacomputerartistin1993,andinmovedinto3Dmodellingtexturecreationforfilmeffects,gainingcreditsmanyblockbusterand
Oscar-winning films. Now he indulges his love of cars – as you’ll see while he’s at work in The Service.
Other art will be displayed, including works from the world-renowned John Ketchell and the innovative Kate Alger. Please do visit The Service and admire the work, which will be for sale.
Threadsoftime
Savile Row has been a byword for exquisite tailoring for centuries – but where did it all begin?
OPPOSITE Beau Brummell was an advocate of tailoring in the area, as was Edward VII, who wore early Henry Poole & Co styles such as this dinner jacket.
SAVILE ROW has always been a hub for the discerning customer, in circles as wide as the military, politics and art.
While the street first became a hub for bespoke tailoring in 1806, the area had been well known for the craft since the 17th century, due to the efforts of Robert Baker, who made Piccadills, a type of collar. William Maddox, a merchant tailor, bought 35 acres of land in East Mayfair in 1622 which included Savile Row. The estate was passed through the generations and handed to the Reverend George Pollen in 1764 –and The Pollen Estate still owns 38 buildings in East Mayfair and is the majority landlord on Savile Row.
In around 1790, the tailors moved to Cork Street, helped by the first of what we’d now call an ‘influencer’, Beau Brummell. A close friend of the future King George IV, he was an
arbiter of men’s fashions and shone a light on the tailoring around the area. This continued when the tailors later moved to Savile Row, drawn by the affluent nature of the street’s
However,inhabitants.itwould be Henry Poole & Co that would be critical for bringing fashion to the street, thanks to the patronage of Henry VII. The firm and the Row itself would be made famous after it invented the dinner jacket for Edward VII in 1860. The origins of companies such as Gieves & Hawkes, H Huntsman & Sons, Dege & Skinner, Norton & Sons and Davies & Son began their association with Savile Row in this era.
At the turn of the 20th century the street was still at the cutting edge of fashion, boosted by the arrival of Frederick Scholte’s English Drape for the Duke of Windsor. This
ABOVE The Duke of Windsor popularised the Dress Soft style, while Ozwald Boateng closed Savile Row to traffic to celebrate the opening of his first premises there.
Dress Soft style evolved into the London Cut, a high, small armhole with a generous upper sleeve for ultimate comfort yet still with a close neck. It became the house style for Anderson & Sheppard.
The 20th century saw an influx of new tailors, mergers and acquisitions, but there was fresh impetus to the street from the likes of Sir Hardy Amies and Nutters of Savile Row, bringing a new audience to the world of bespoke tailoring and modernising industry processes along the way. During this period, many outfitters expanded their product range to ready-to-wear items, and some took the name of Savile Row across the world with boutiques in other major cities.
Come the 1990s, the art of tailoring was refreshed once again
with the pioneering advances of the likes of Ozwald Boateng, Timothy Everest and Richard James as part of the New Bespoke Movement. With a fresh approach to design coming at a time when London was the centre of everything cool, Savile Row was thrust back into the spotlight as the basis for UK style.
That has continued in more recent years, with the likes of Richard Anderson, Cad & The Dandy and others reinvigorating the Row in new ways. For example, the street has welcomed femalefounded bespoke tailor The Deck, which caters solely for women.
As we move into the future, Savile Row will continue to be at the cutting edge of fashion, blending the precedent of history and tradition with a forward-thinking approach.
RowOrderingaSavilesuit
What is involved when you decide to buy a bespoke suit from a Savile Row tailor? These are the stages…
Before your first visit
Prior to your trouserweight?winter,seasonAmbuttonedaDotheyouyouaboutyouayourappointmentfirstwithtailor,therearenumberofthingsneedtothink–suchaswhatlikeandwhenwillbewearingsuit.Askyourself:Ipreferasuitwithsingle-ordouble-front?Iafterathree-(autumn,spring)Whataboutwidth?
Honing options
With years tailorexperience,ofthewillbeable to advise you on your requirements and work out what you need. Once you have decided on the garments, the cutter will help you choose the best fabric – each cloth has its own properties, so it’s best to get their expert advice.
Pattern cutting
Once you’ve chosen the cloth and style, the cutter takes your measurements in order to cut your own personal paper pattern, which you will keep for life.
Trimming
The paper pattern is laid out on the cloth and chalked around. The fabric is then cut by hand, leaving extra cloth at certain seams or ‘inlays’, so the suit can be altered at a later date if your weight changes.
construction.garment’sbeandnaturaltrimmings,Materialsuchaswool,canvaslinen,canalsoaddedtothe
Putting together
The garment is then assigned to a highly skilled tailor – often, that same tailor will be dedicated to you as long as you remain a customer to ensure both a continuity of service and a consistency of quality.
First fitting (or baste)
The tailor canvasses the suit by hand ready for the first fitting. During this fitting, you will find yourself wearing a rough draft of your suit that is only loosely together.stitchedThisis the time to say whether the jacket feels tight in the shoulders, for instance. The cutter will then alter the suit to fit and enhance your posture.
Marking up
After the first fitting, the garment is marked up with all the nextpreparedtoisorders.usedtimeadjustedpatternre-cut.takenandre-adjustmentsthencompletelyapartandThepaperisalsoatthesamesoitcanbeagainforfutureThegarmentthengivenbackthetailortobeforyourfitting.
Second fitting
The second fitting is more about getting the details – such as trouser and sleeve length – right. The suit is checked over for break over shoe, seat of trouser and drape. Alterations and amendments are refined, giving the suit its fit and comfort. A good tailor should be able to deliver a suit that looks and feels fantastic.
Buttonholes
After the lastingitsused,asnaturaltrimmingsout.thehand-finishesbuttonholeshand-makescarriedalterationsfinalareout,atailortheandsuitinsideandOnlythebestandpurefibres,suchhandsilks,aregivingthesuitlongevityandfinish.
Final piece
The garment is then ready for your final fitting. You’ll be given advice on how to clean, press and care for the suit to maintain its shape. Each is numbered and logged so the tailors can source any materials to repair even minor damage. This process also means subsequent orders will require fewer fittings, so it will be much quicker.
The cars
Never before has Savile Row been graced by the presence of so many remarkable cars. From pre-war racers and coachbuilt luxury saloons to the latest hybrid supercars and classics converted to electric propulsion, the Concours showcases some of the greatest models ever made. Enjoy them!
2022 Everrati
Land Rover Series IIA
Owner: Everrati Hosted by: Henry Poole & CoThis exceptional Land Rover Series IIA is part of a fresh restoration culture that blends traditional craftsmanship with contemporary electric propulsion. While the car has been renovated to the highest level by Land Rover specialists, including the fitment of a galvanised bulkhead and chassis, the in-house-developed EV powertrain drivetrain is all new. There’s a 60kWh battery pack with advanced battery management and temperature control, plus regenerative braking. It has a range of up to 150 miles, but the 300Nm torque makes it perfect for traversing almost every obstacle in front of it.
The interior is far more luxurious than originally, with Bridge of Weir leather
throughout. Customisation is key to the Everrati Land Rover, with endless combinations of bespoke extras, and both handmade Mohair Soft Top and Safari Hard Top formats are available.
It also has power steering, but retains all the elements that make Land Rovers
special – two- and four-wheel-drive, as well as high/low modes for traction or dynamic ability. Bespoke finance packages are available. www.everrati.com
Power: 150bhp | Top speed: 120mph 0-60mph: 13.0 seconds
1960
David CookeOwner:FerrariCEGGA250TR
The latest in an impressive line-up of racing-car restoration projects completed under ex-Harlequins and England rugby player – and Historic motor sport fan – David Cooke, this CEGGA Ferrari 250TR has a fascinating history. Six years ago, David read the story of Swiss brothers Claude and Georges Gachnang and their Scuderia CEGGA team – and he tracked them down and asked them to help him recreate a tool-room copy of the Scaglietti-bodied racer and hillclimber that back in 1960 they had built from the wreck of a 1958 250TR.
Fired up by the idea, the nowoctogenarians agreed to provide drawings, detailed technical spec
and hands-on help to enable David and the Neil Twyman team to build the car around original Ferrari parts including a centre chassis section. The aluminium body was hand-built as was originally done by Scaglietti. The car was finished in time to race at the 2019 Goodwood
Revival, and the plan is now for it to once again grace the hillclimbs and circuits that it tackled in period. www.ceggaferrari250.com
Power: N/A | Top speed: N/A 0-60mph: N/A
1965 Porsche 356C
Hosted by: Henry Poole & Co
Renowned model Gandy loves classics, and has just added this subtly modified 356C to his collection. He worked with LuxClassics from the first concepts to finding a donor and then the full bespoke restoration process, taking styling advice from car designer Ian Callum.
The custom-made bumpers are shorter and fit more closely to the body than the originals, while the painted wheels are also wider and fitted with knock-off hubs. Further neat touches include leather bonnet straps and a retrimmed interior. Finally, the lowered suspension gives a perfect stance.
Power: 88bhp (std) | Top spd: 100mph 0-60mph: 13.5 seconds
2022 Morgan Super 3
Owner: Morgan Motor Company Hosted by: Dege & Skinner
Taking its inspiration from the jet age, Morgan’s new Super 3 three-wheeler melds the very best of automotivemanufacturing techniques, design tradition and craftsmanship with the latest tech to provide a uniquely exciting driving experience. A raft of customisation, accessory and upgrade options make each model unique, but the example on show at the Concours is even more special, thanks to its stunning bespoke trim by Savile Row stalwart Dege & Skinner.
The Super 3 is Morgan’s first cleansheet visual design since the arrival of the Aero 8 in 2000, and it pairs its sleek design language with a modern 1.5-litre Ford engine and super-formed
aluminium monocoque construction. Morgan design head Jonathan Wells explained: “During the jet age, the balance of form vs function was equalised. It was within these decades that the most aerodynamic forms were not only required, but also admired.” www.morgan-motor.com
Power: 118bhp | Top speed: 130mph 0-62mph: 7.0 seconds
Owner: David Gandy GREGORYDEL2022 Bizzarrini 5300 GT
Owner: Bizzarrini
Hosted by: Holland & Sherry
Giotto Bizzarrini was the mastermind behind the Ferrari 250s SWB and GTO –and designed the Lamborghini V12, too – and now his slippery 1965 5300 GT has been revisited by a stunning recreation.
Bizzarrini brand owner Pegasus Holdings is making a Revival series of 25 authentic interpretations in the image of Giotto’s ’65 Le Mans class-winner. Built in the UK by RML, it features the same V8 engine as was used in period. Each example can be modified to match the customer’s spec. All this combined with superb chassis engineering delivers a sublime drive. www.bizzarrini.com
Power: 400bhp+ | Top speed: N/A 0-62mph: N/A
2022 Caton Healey
Owner: Envisage Group Hosted by: Scabal
The Caton looks at first glance like your typical Healey 100, but it has been extensively re-engineered both mechanically and in its all-new bodywork. The result uses the same basic chassis and running gear as the original, but with a smoother, restyled body and higher-quality interior.
It’s built using a fascinating mix of current OEM-level technology and traditional craftsmanship skills, combining parent company Envisage Group’s bespoke engineering knowhow with the decades-old experience attained by JME Healeys.
Only 25 cars will be produced, each one tailored to customer spec. Its chassis undergoes a complete
restoration, suspension and brakes are uprated, the engine is tuned and a new five-speed gearbox is fitted. Most strikingly, the interior is re-engineered and bespoke retrimmed to extremely high quality. www.caton.uk
Power: 185bhp | Top speed: TBC 0-60mph: N/A
1931 Alfa Romeo 6C 1750 Gran Sport Series V
Owner: RM Sotheby’s Hosted by: Ozwald Boateng
This sublime 6C 1750 has an extensive documented ownership history and even participated in the 1933 Mille Miglia. It has been sympathetically restored, and is one of the oldest cars to appear at the Concours on Savile Row.
Alfa introduced the 6C in 1925 to build on its excellent track record in motor sport during the inter-war years, with star drivers such as Antonio Ascari and Giuseppe Campari. Adhering to the ‘win on Sunday, sell on Monday’ ethos, aspects of the competition cars’ engineering would feed into the burgeoning road-model range.
The 6C – named for its straight-six engine – could be adapted into Sedan,
Spider, Cabriolet, Gran Turismo or Super Sport form by coachbuilders. This Zagato-bodied Gran Sport Series V was the finest Italian sports car money could buy. It went through several hands in Italy before being transported to Africa and, decades later, the UK. It remained
in storage for years before undergoing a rebuild with the aim of extolling the virtues of its originality while retaining its usability. www.rmsothebys.com
Power: 102bhp | Top speed: 105mph 0-60mph: N/A
2022 McLaren Artura
Owner: McLaren Automotive Hosted by: Ozwald Boateng
McLaren Automotive heralds an allnew era with the Artura, its first seriesproduction high-performance supercar to boast a hybrid drivetrain. Based on the state-of-the-art McLaren Carbon Fibre Lightweight Architecture (MCLA), it pushes the legendary British car manufacturer’s relentless pursuit of lightness to another level, while the minimal, beautiful design ensures that aerodynamic efficiency is more advanced than ever.
From the rear suspension to the advanced E-diff, every new element contributes to a uniquely intense driving experience. Ultra-light supercar engineering; blistering electrified power; sublime agility and engagement… the
Artura is McLaren to the core. Appropriately, the car is presented in partnership with Savile Row’s Ozwald Boateng, who has brought tailoring to a whole new generation of men with his transformational use of colour, cut and fabric that fuses traditional classic
British tailoring with a high-end modern design. This pairing makes a very rare sighting of a very special car even more exciting. https://cars.mclaren.com
Power: 660bhp+ | Top speed: 205mph 0-62mph: 3.0 seconds
1950 Owner:166MMFerrariBarchetta
Clive Beecham Hosted by: Gieves & HawkesThis 1950 166MM – chassis 0064M and no. 24 of only 25 – has an amazing story; it was built for Fiat empire heir and eventual owner of Ferrari itself, Giovanni Agnelli. He put his personal stamp on the car from the start, thanks to unique ‘teardrop’ rear lights, distinctive twotone paint and a custom dashboard.
Developed from the 125S by Milan’s Carrozzeria Touring, the 1948 Barchetta revolutionised sports car design with its V12 motor and ultra-thin Superleggera bodywork. The MM established Ferrari in international racing with a first place at the 1949 Mille Miglia, plus victories at Le Mans and Spa. Post-Agnelli, 0064M was owned by Ferrari concessionaire
and Ecurie Francorchamps grandee Jacques Swaters for 46 years, during which it was nicknamed ‘Nonna’ (Italian for Grandma), restored and displayed at the New York Museum of Modern Art. The current owner bought Nonna in 2012, and drove it in the Mille Miglia in 2013 and
2018, while the Ferrari also won the Coppa D’Oro at Villa D’Este in 2015. It’s appeared in two exhibitions at the Enzo Ferrari Museum in Modena as well.
Power: 140bhp | Top speed: 125mph 0-60mph: 10.0 seconds
2022 Maserati MC20
Owner: HR Owen Hosted by: Cad & The DandyThe Maserati MC20 is the first midengined supercar from the Modenese marque since the thunderous MC12 of the 2000s, and represents a fresh start for The Trident. At its heart is the 3.0litre twin-turbo Nettuno V6, which uses indirect injection and Formula 1-inspired twin-spark plugs to deliver outrageous performance, with 0-60mph taking less than three seconds. However, thanks to adaptive damping it’s as comfortable a cruiser as any of the grand tourers in Maserati’s vibrant heritage.
While the MC20 can be ordered in standard colours including Bianco Audace, Nero Enigma and Rosso Vicente, the Fuoriserie programme allows for an almost infinite array of
hues, whether your inspiration comes from Maserati’s rich motor sport history or cutting-edge contemporary style.
This car is finished in Grigio Mistero with the optional Carbonfibre Pack and 20in Birdcage wheels, with a Nero leather interior with Rosso stitching and
a stitched Trident on the headrest. There’s also a Sonus Faber sound system and a carbonfibre engine cover. www.maserati.com
Power: 621bhp | Top speed: 202mph 0-60mph: 2.7 seconds
1964 Jaguar Kingsman E-type
Owner: Eagle E-types
Hosted by: Huntsman/Hagerty
Upgraded by specialist Eagle, this early 4.2-litre E-type starred in Kingsman: The Golden Circle. When MARV Productions was seeking a Jaguar for its hero, played by Taron Egerton, Eagle had recently overhauled this car with dark-green paint, leather trim and many upgrades. Perfect for a super-spy about town...
Eagle’s bespoke service is universally reviewed in tailoring terminology. Each made-to-order restoration is precisely specified to suit the owner’s driving style, personal requests and even their body shape. www.eaglegb.com
Power: 285bhp | Top speed: 155mph 0-60mph: 6.5 seconds
2022 Czinger 21C
Owner: Czinger Hosted by: Norton & Sons
Say hello to the Czinger 21C – it’s the first public showing of the car in the UK. This hybrid is at the sharp edge of hypercar design; not only does its in-house drivetrain have the most engine-dense internal-combustion unit with a huge combined 1233bhp, but it’s the first car to be 3D printed.
Every 21C is designed with a patented human-AI combination, with each part optimised for performance, weight and packaging. The car weighs only 1250kg dry, but the way the parts have been designed in the same manner as in nature, there’s excellent rigidity and strength, too. The result is gobsmacking performance: it’ll blast from 0-62mph in 1.9 seconds, with
186mph arriving just 6.6 seconds later.
Just 80 21Cs will be built, with two versions available; a high-downforce configuration or a low-drag variant. Both are powered by that in-house Czinger powertrain, and each will be built to the bespoke needs of the customer. www.czinger.com
Power: 1233bhp | Top speed: 253mph 0-62mph: 1.9 seconds
1952 Ferrari
Owner:Competition225SBerlinetta
Classic Motor Hub
Hosted by: Cad & The Dandy/ChopardOne of six 225S Competition Berlinettas built, this Vignale-bodied V12 Ferrari was commissioned in 1952 by Scuderia Inter founder Count Antonio ‘Bruno’ Sterzi. The car was entered into the 1952 Mille Miglia, and went on to win the Coppa della Toscana, Bolzano-Mendola Hillclimb and Coppa InterEuropa di Monza.
Sterzi sold it to Ferrari patron Siro Sbraci of Florence in 1954, and a year later it went to Rome Maserati dealer Guglielmo ‘Mimmo’ Dei, who would go on to found the Centro Sud racing equippe. www.classicmotorhub.com
Power: 207bhp | Top speed: 143mph 0-60mph: 6.3 seconds
2022
Owner:OutdoorMullinerBentleyBentaygaPursuits
Bentley Motors Hosted by: H Huntsman & SonsTargeting the discerning outdoors sports-person, the Bentayga’s latest, very limited-run Mulliner Collection is named for – and centres around – Outdoor Pursuits. This UK-specific, hand-built luxury SUV is themed on angling, equestrian activities and canine friends, and features curated interiors among other enhancements. Using herringbone tweed, bespoke embroidery and unique veneers, the trim demonstrates Mulliner’s capability to inspire bespoke cabins. On the outside, 22-inch, ten-spoke wheels are matched to the Havana, Cumbrian Green or Magnetic paint. A celebration
of the natural world, the Outdoor Pursuits represents the rebirth of coachbuilding and personal commissioning within Mulliner, the world’s oldest coachbuilder. www.bentleymotors.com
Power: 550bhp | Top speed: 180mph 0-62mph: 4.5 seconds
2022 Aston Martin
Owner:DBX707
Aston Martin Hosted by: JP HackettElevating prestige sports car brand Aston Martin to the pinnacle of the highperformance SUV segment, the flagship DBX707 is claimed to be the fastest, most powerful and best-handling machine in its luxury genre. It features a tuned 4.0-litre twin-turbo V8 that boasts increased power to 707PS (697bhp). Commanding styling cues complement the comprehensive suite of engine, transmission, suspension and brake upgrades, thus enhancing the character and compelling capability of the already-sublime standard DBX.
The DBX707 pushes the boundaries to set new standards of performance and desirability. It’s also received an equally
thorough design makeover, with stunning results; overtly sporting but with the style and attention to detail for which the marque is celebrated. For customers looking to further enhance the DBX707’s exclusive nature and create something truly unique, Q by Aston Martin – the
brand’s bespoke service – can be commissioned to deliver the ultimate in personalisation from an extensive palette of options. www.astonmartin.com
Power: 697bhp | Top speed: 193mph 0-62mph: 3.3 seconds
Building The Legend E-type Reimagined
Owner: Building The Legend Hosted by: Gieves & Hawkes
Building The Legend has forged its name with its 1966 Le Mans Prototype evocations, and it has now focused its attention on 24 bespoke takes on the Jaguar E-type. The bodystyle and finish are said to be limited only by the owner’s imagination, with each one hand-crafted with a blend of traditional skills and cutting-edge tech, in coupé, speedster, roadster or low-drag racing-car form.
At the heart is a version of BTL’s Tera quad-cam V12 in either 6.1- or 6.8-litre guise. This has been inspired by the howling V12s from Ferrari that screamed around the Le Mans circuit, and the missed opportunity for Jaguar to follow up its straight-six success in endurance
racing with a V12. The engine is an evolution of the latter concept, with between 350bhp and 650bhp available. The green car pictured above has a 550bhp 6.1-litre engine, for instance.
The cars’ bespoke nature continues elsewhere, with a vast range of options
to tailor everything to your needs, from interior creature comforts to chassis and running-gear upgrades. www.buildingthelegend.co.uk
Power: 350-625bhp | Top spd: 180mph+ 0-60mph: 4.0 seconds or less (est)
2021 Aston Martin
Owner:Speedster
Private owner
Hosted by: JP HackettCreated by the bespoke customisation service Q by Aston Martin, this uncompromising, visceral two-seater draws inspiration from both the brand’s rich racing history and aeronautical design. Only 88 examples will be built. Billed as a “living show car”, it underlines Aston’s commitment to delivering stunning machines using the engineering ingenuity and advanced materials evident throughout the entire range.
Power comes from a 5.2-litre, twinturbo V12, mated to a ZF eight-speed auto ’box. The latest bonded-aluminium architecture creates a unique chassis, while the bespoke body is constructed from carbonfibre. The cabin specification
pushes new boundaries, using a mix of traditional and modern materials.
Finishes include one inspired by the legendary F/A-18 fighter jet, born from a collaboration with Boeing and finished in Skyfall Silver with satin black on the exhaust tips, vent grilles and vanes. An
historic DBR1 spec is also available, with meticulously crafted details that pay homage to the 1959 Le Mans-winning original. www.astonmartin.com
Power: 700bhp | Top speed: 186mph 0-62mph: 3.5 seconds
2022 Morgan Plus Six
Owner: Morgan Motor Company
Hosted by: Dege & Skinner
With addictive power, unrivalled exhilaration, and traditional styling and craftsmanship, the hand-built Plus Six is a true driver’s sports car that heralds a new era of performance and refinement for the Morgan range. It’s the most dynamically capable model the British brand has ever produced. The marque’s iconic classic silhouette is underpinned by an all-new CX-Generation aluminiumbonded platform and a 335bhp straightsix BMW Turbo powertrain, while every component has been refined or redesigned to create this all-new model.
As Morgan’s flagship, the Plus Six boasts superb material quality and finish. Both on the outside and in the driver-focused cockpit, greater levels
of customisation than ever present the customer with a flexible canvas upon which to impart their own personality. In addition, a composite removable hard-top inspired by 1960s road racers is available as standard on the Plus Six Touring. As a finishing touch, the full
production of your personal car can be recorded in a stunning, 52-page coffeetable book. Now that’s bespoke service! www.morgan-motor.com
Power: 335bhp | Top speed: 166mph 0-62mph: 4.2 seconds
1962 Facel Vega Facel II
Owner: Steve GrovesFrench manufacturer Facel Vega made exclusive GTs using big American engines. The Facel II arrived in 1961, and this car was bought new by Sir Arthur Frederick Pullman Wheeler, having appeared at the Earls Court Motor Show. It was one of just two right-handdrive High Output manuals fitted with a larger, 6765cc Chrysler V8. It went through various owners, colour changes and modifications before being restored in 1997 by Romance of Rust. It then passed through several more hands before the current owner returned it to the London-based restorer for further honing. www.romanceofrust.com
Power: 390bhp | Top speed: 150mph 0-60mph: 7.8 seconds
1951/1952 Dannenhauer & Stauss Cabriolet
Owner: Mark Reynolds
In spring 1950 German coachbuilder Gottfried Dannenhauer set up Dannenhauer & Stauss with his son-in-law Kurt Stauss. Gottfried had previously worked at Karosseriewerk Reutter when it built prototype pre-war Volkswagens, and now D&S commissioned designer Wagner & Oswald to work with it producing stylish coachbuilt cars using Beetle floorpans and running gear. Around 100 convertibles were manufactured between 1950 and 1957.
This example’s VW donor was made on October 14, 1950, and the D&S bodywork was fitted in late 1951 or early 1952. Its history up until 1979 is unknown, but at that point it was
bought by an Austrian who carried out a rolling restoration over 40 years. The Cabriolet came into the hands of Hampshire’s Just Kampers in 2019. It underwent a 3000-hour restoration, and was upgraded with periodsuitable 1955 Porsche 356 Pre-A running gear. www.justkampers.com
Power: 60bhp | Top speed: N/A 0-60mph: N/A
This legend is one of the all-time greats of pre-war racing and record-breaking, achieving more than 140mph on the famously bumpy and dangerous concrete-banked Brooklands circuit. Built for ex-Bentley Motors chairman Woolf Barnato by brilliant engineer Wally Hassan, it was developed and raced from 1934 until 1938, before being moved into storage for the war.
The car retains its original chassis and 8.0-litre engine. It’s fitted with the original-style single-seater bodywork, but the later two-seater body has also been kept. https://vintagebentley.com
Power: N/A | Top speed: 140mph+ 0-60mph: N/A
2022 Bentley Bacalar
Owner: Bentley Motors Hosted by: H Huntsman & Sons
Not only is the Bacalar the most costly and bespoke Bentley of the modern era, it also marks the Crewe marque’s return to the pinnacle of high-end coachbuilding – thus making this engineering prototype’s appearance on Savile Row even more pertinent.
The 6.0-litre individualengineeredonlydriver-focusedtheCollectionsportfoliocoachbuilderBentleyfour-wheel-driveW12-powered,two-seaterbyMulliner–theworld’soldest–heraldsanewthree-futureforthebrand:Classic,andCoachbuilt.Itdeliversultimateexpressionofopen-top,grandtouring,and12carswillbedesigned,andhand-craftedtocustomers’tastes.All
of these have already been allocated. Sustainable craftsmanship, ethically sourced materials and a carbonneutral build facility reflect Bentley’s commitment to an eco-friendly future. www.bentleymotors.com
Power: 650bhp | Top spd: 200mph+ 0-62mph: Sub-3.8 seconds (est)
1997 Ferrari F50
Owner: RM Sotheby’s Hosted by: Ozwald Boateng
Taking its inspiration from the Pininfarina-designed 1989 Ferrari Mythos concept car, and created to celebrate Ferrari’s 50th anniversary, the iconic mid-engined F50 (Type F130) arrived back in 1995 as the successor to the F40. The two-door, two-seat, targa-top sports car was manufactured through until July 1997, with a total of 349 examples passing through the marque’s legendary factory gates in the town of Maranello, Italy.
Described by its maker as the “closest thing to a road-going Formula 1 car the company had ever built”, the F50 featured a 4.7-litre naturally aspirated Tipo F130B 60-valve V12 powerplant that was developed from
the 3.5-litre V12 that Scuderia Ferrari used in its 1990 641 F1 car. The model on show at the Concours on Savile Row is one of 302 examples that were painted in the most popular factory hue for both this model and Ferraris in general – Rosso Corsa, or bright red. It
shows a mere 24,000 miles on the clock and – very unusually – was delivered in right-hand-drive format to the UK from new. www.rmsothebys.com
Power: 512bhp | Top speed: 200mph+ 0-60mph: 3.6 seconds
2022 McLaren Elva
Owner: McLaren Automotive Hosted by: Ozwald Boateng
The lightest modern McLaren is perhaps the one with the purest focus – ultimate performance prowess, on road and track. The fifth member of the Ultimate Series, the Elva takes its extreme aesthetic approach from the all-conquering 1960s GTs such as the M1A, M1B and M1C. Its name comes from that time, too, when Elva manufactured and supported a customer-racing version of the M1A.
As with those outrageous machines that founder Bruce drove so adeptly, the Elva blends big power with as low a kerbweight as possible. The midmounted 4.0-litre twin-turbo V8 kicks out 802bhp – enough to blast to 60mph in around 2.6 seconds and on to 203mph. It’s the most powerful non-hybridised
McLaren ever. The two-door speedster body is crafted from carbonfibre, as is the chassis. The lightweighting processes extend to the brakes, with 1kg shaved by using titanium calipers. To save further weight, the body uses just three main panels. Each car is built to order by the
bespoke MSO department; the model on Savile Row has a visual carbonfibre finish with a teal tint, with brushed champagne brightwork. https://cars.mclaren.com
Power: 802bhp | Top speed: 203mph 0-62mph: 2.8 seconds
1986
Owner:TestarossaFerrariSpider
Ronald Stern Hosted by: Gieves & HawkesAll Testarossas are special, but you’re looking at something truly unique – the only Testarossa Spider built by Ferrari. While the likes of Pininfarina and Straman would fulfil special orders, the one Ferrarimade example was a gift for l’Avvocato Giovanni ‘Gianni’ Agnelli to celebrate the anniversary of him taking over Fiat.
The car was registered with the plate TO 00000G in Turin in June 1986 to IFI Spa, the financial firm owned by Agnelli. It was then registered to Gianni less than a year later. It’s finished in Argento 101/C because AG (for Agnelli Gianni) is the symbol for silver in the periodic table.
While the car obviously sports extra switchgear to operate the hood and roll
hoop, if you look closely you can see how it was built to exactly suit Agnelli’s needs. In his 30s he’d seriously injured his left leg in a car accident, so Ferrari’s engineers thought up a novel system to ease long-distance comfort. At the press of a button the clutch pedal
retracts and the gears change automatically via a Valeo electronic clutch system. This set-up was also later used on Agnelli’s bespoke Ferrari F40.
Power: 385bhp | Top speed: 171mph 0-60mph: 5.2 seconds
1960 Ferrari 250GT PF Owner:Coupé
Cici Muldoon Hosted by: The DeckThe 250GT PF Coupé represents the point at which sales of Ferrari’s road cars began to take off. The 3.0-litre Colombo V12-powered model was built in higher numbers than any previous Ferrari, with coachbuilder Pinin Farina constructing a new factory to cope.
All the same, a mere 353 examples were built from 1958, over three different engine variations. Only around half of the production run is thought to have survived today, as many were turned into GTO and other replicas.
This stunning example, 1743GT, is one of the later cars. It was commissioned by the 1957 European hillclimb champion Willy Daetwyler,
and supplied via Eleanor von Neumann’s dealership in Los Angeles, California. Willy specified a competition engine, with three 40 DCL/6 Webers, velocity stacks, disc brakes, high-lift camshafts, limited-slip differential, Borrani wire wheels and an Abarth exhaust. It had
lived its entire life in the US, and has only recently been imported into the UK by its owner, the entrepreneur, scientist and concours judge Cici Muldoon.
Power: 240bhp | Top speed: 126mph 0-60mph: 7.1 seconds
1924 Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost Piccadilly Roadster
Owner: Ashton Keynes Vintage Restorations
The revered Silver Ghost contributed to Rolls-Royce’s reputation for making the world’s greatest cars, and this Piccadilly Roadster is one of four with Merrimac coachwork. It was built at Rolls-Royce’s Springfield, Massachusetts factory for ER Campbell of the soup-producing firm. After three years he sold it to Henry MacDonald of New York, and from 1946 it passed through owners in Philadelphia, New Jersey and Michigan, before heading to the UK. Dealer Ivor Bleaney kept it until 2005, and P&A Wood restored it for its next owner. www.akvr.com
Power: 60-75bhp | Top speed: 63mph 0-60mph: N/A
1937 Bentley 4¼ Litre Sedanca Coupé by Gurney Nutting
Owner: Simon Taylor Hosted by: CommissionedHuntsmanin1936 by the Vicomtesse Yvonne Cahen d’Anvers, this Bentley was bodied by Gurney Nutting in a style similar to that of the Hispano-Suiza of her husband Anthony Gustav de Rothschild. The sweeping coupé was a marked contrast to the more reserved Gurney Nutting offerings, but it took so long to construct that the Vicomtesse lost interest and bought something else.
HR Owen promptly sold it, and after 20 years the car headed to the US. It stayed there until the late 1990s, when journalist and commentator Simon Taylor brought it back to the UK. It
was then treated to a four-year bodyoff restoration, after which it won the Montagu Trophy for the most elegant car from Europe at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance. Since then it’s taken a class win at Salon Privé and been used to tour Europe, including several holidays to France.
Power: 110bhp | Top speed: 100mph 0-60mph: 15 seconds (est)
1960 Aston Martin DB4 GT
Owner: George Bamford
Hosted by: Gieves & Hawkes
The 1959 London Motor Show was the stage upon which Aston Martin unveiled its lightweight, high-performance DB4 GT. Coming in at 85kg less than the regular DB4, and boasting a thinner aluminium skin and enclosed headlights, the GT went on to be raced extensively – and successfully – by many famous drivers.
A pure two-seater of which only 75 were built, its chassis was shorter than that of the standard car, while the side and rear windows were made of Plexiglas. The upgraded straight-six produced 302bhp, and some ‘comfortspec’ components were removed to help hone this circuit-ready machine as far as possible. It was the fastest road-legal production car of the time.
DB4GT No. 0125/R – or 18 TVX – was built in the Experimental Department as a Master Project car and sold new to John Ogier’s Essex Racing Stable. It was prepared as a Works model, and driven by the likes of Innes Ireland and Roy Salvadori – the latter of whom piloted it
to a second-place finish to Stirling Moss in the Rob Walker Ferrari 250GT SWB at the 1960 Goodwood TT. It now forms part of the Bamford Collection.
Power: 302bhp | Top speed: 151mph 0-60mph: 6.1 seconds
1950 Frazer Nash Le Mans Replica
Owner: c/o Girardo & Co.
Hosted by: Chopard/Cad & The Dandy
In case of confusion, this is no ordinary ‘replica’. In 1949, Frazer Nash entered the first post-War Le Mans 24 Hours with a prototype High Speed version of its Competition Model. This featured a 120bhp 2.0-litre Bristol six-cylinder motor, close-ratio four-speed gearbox, shaft drive and open body with cycle guards.
Norman Culpan and HJ Aldington finished an incredible third place overall, averaging 126.4mph over 3033km. So strong was the resultant boost in sales, Frazer Nash built 34 Le Mans Replicas. These were driven to huge motor sport success by the likes of Stirling Moss, Roy Salvadori and Tony Brooks. Among the most historically significant
Le Mans Replicas, HBC 1 has a stunning period competition history including entries at Le Mans, Reims, Goodwood and in the RAC TT. Decades later, after a comprehensive rebuild by Frazer Nash specialist Blakeney Motorsport, the car was driven by Moss during the 2008
Grand Prix de Monaco Historique, and it has since appeared at the Goodwood Revival and Members’ Meeting and the Le Mans Classic. www.girardo.com
Power: 120bhp+ | Top speed: 130mph+ 0-60mph: 8.5 seconds (est)
The tailors
At the centre of the Concours on Savile Row are the tailors. Some have been on the famous London Row for more than 100 years; others are relative newcomers – all are committed to providing the very best bespoke clothing and the finest service to their discerning customers. They will all be opening their doors during the two-day event.
Arthur Sleep
7-8 Savile www.arthursleepers.co.ukRow
Arthur Sleep brings shoemaking back to central London for the first time in over a century. Its state-of-the-art microfactory – positioned in the store – combines the English shoemaking tradition with precision manufacturing techniques to achieve unparalleled customer involvement and responsive, ecologically sound production.
Each pair of its luxury slippers is created by artisans who draw on more than 500 years of handcrafting tradition, representing British footwear design and handmade craftsmanship at their most refined.
Cad & The Dandy
7-8 Savile Row, 13 Savile Row
Notable clients: Harrison Ford, Samuel L Jackson, Will Ferrell, Chris Rock www.cadandthedandy.co.uk
Cad & The Dandy was founded by Ian Meiers and James Sleater, who met through their families’ connections in the couturier business. It focuses on the look and feel of the garments alongside the desire to drag British tailoring and Savile Row back to the cutting edge of men’s wear.
Since its establishment in 2008, the company has opened three shops across London, each with their own bespoke workshops.
Chittleborough & Morgan
12 Savile Row
Notable clients: Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, Mick Jagger andmorgan.co.ukwww.chittleborough
The origins of Chittleborough & Morgan date back to the swinging 1960s, when Nutters opened its doors on Savile Row. Roy Chittleborough and Joseph Morgan, together with Edward Sexton, were the sartorial skills that gave life to the creations of Tommy Nutter.
Their energetic and rebellious styles dressed many celebrities of the time. Roy and Joe established their own tailoring business in 1981, but it still retains the unique Nutters character.
www.clothsurgeon.com40clothsurgeonSavileRow
Rav Matharu founded this brand in London, 2012. Inspired by counter culture and with an appreciation of Savile Row craftsmanship and tailoring, clothsurgeon combines the casual aesthetic of streetwear with classic men’s silhouettes to create a familiar yet contemporary wardrobe.
In addition to seasonal collections, it offers a bespoke service that allows the customer to create whatever they wish, from whatever fabric. Drawing on Savile Row heritage, it provides superb quality and personalisation optimised for the modern consumer.
Notable37CremieuxSavileRowclients: Rod Stewart, André Balazs, Elton John, Nicolas Sarkozy, Jacques Chirac https://uk.cremieux.fr/
This family-owned luxury men’s-wear brand was founded in Saint-Tropez in 1976. Daniel Cremieux studied English in London and became fascinated by the students’ preppy look. Following a trip to New York, he returned to France and set about creating a modern French twist on this traditional style.
Flagship retail stores can be found in Paris, Saint-Tropez, Capri, New York, Palm Beach, Bal Harbour – and, of course, Savile Row, London.
Davies & Son
38 Savile Row
Notable clients: Admiral Lord Nelson www.daviesandson.com
Established in 1803, Davies & Son is perhaps the oldest tailor on the Row. Along the way it has acquired the tailoring houses of Johns & Pegg, Fallan & Harvey, James & James and Wells of Mayfair, to name but a few. In over two centuries of bespoke tailoring it’s made garments for four kings, seven crown princes, two US presidents and innumerable knights of the realm.
As one of only three purely bespoke houses on Savile Row, and the only example to the west side, Davies & Son is a piece of refined British history.
Dege & Skinner
10 Savile www.dege-skinner.co.ukRow
Dege & Skinner is an historic specialist tailoring company that has extensive expertise in bespoke suits and bespoke shirts, alongside ready-to-wear shirts and military uniforms; of contemporary note, it made the official uniform that Prince Harry wore at his 2018 wedding to Meghan EstablishedMarkle.in1865, the still-familyowned company is a Royal Warrant holder. Managing director William Skinner has in recent times also been the chairman of the Savile Row Bespoke Association.
www.drakes.com9Drake’sSavileRow
Drake’s was founded by Michael Drake in east London back in 1977. Originally a maker of men’s scarves, shawls and plaids, the company eventually expanded into hand-made ties and handkerchiefs as well, all of which followed the brand ethos of relaxed elegance.
Today, Drake’s produces soft tailoring in Italy, traditional knitwear in Scotland and shirts in its own factory in Chard, Somerset, alongside premium jersey and an expansive range of outerwear, accessories and selvedge denim.
Edward Sexton
36 Savile Row, 26 Beauchamp Place
Notable clients: Mick and Bianca Jagger, Annie Lennox, Paul McCartney www.edwardsexton.co.uk
When Nutters of Savile Row opened in 1969, Edward Sexton cut some of the most flamboyant shapes ever seen for the brand’s loyal customers – many of whom were the leading music and modelling stars of the day. Later going it alone, the house of Edward Sexton now has its bespoke HQ in Knightsbridge with its off-thepeg shop located on Savile Row. Its suits are sought out by celebrities including Mark Ronson, Naomi Campbell and Marie Helvin.
Gaziano & Girling
39 Savile www.gazianogirling.comRow
Tony Gaziano and Dean Girling have been making high-end shoes in England for more than 25 years. Mixing Italian lines and comfort with British craft and tradition, their aim is to craft the finest shoes in the world.
With a to-measureoffbarkItalySwissNorthamptonshire,inapproach,zero-compromisetheirfootweariscraftedthehomeofUKshoemaking,usingFrenchorcalfleatherthatisfinishedinandmarriedwithEnglishoakforthesoles.Gaziano&Girlingersbothbespokeandmade-shoes.
Gieves & Hawkes
1 Savile NotableRowclients: Charles, Prince of Wales, Aga Khan www.gievesandhawkes.com
Formed from two businesses – Gieves, founded in 1785 and Hawkes, 1771 –Gieves & Hawkes was established in 1974. Its excellence and craftsmanship have led it to supply royal houses in Europe and around the world, as well as many famous stars of stage and screen, sports personalities and other public figures.
The house’s three Royal Warrants – the first of which was received in 1809 – stand in recognition of unrivalled quality and service.
Henry Poole & Co
15 Savile Row
Notable clients: Neville Chamberlain, Robert Mitchum, Lillie Langtry www.henrypoole.com
One of the oldest tailors on Savile Row, Henry Poole & Co has offered the best in fine British tailoring ever since 1806. It is both a family story and one of an international business that covers the past, the present and the Specialisingfuture. in bespoke hand-made suits and shirts, generations of the Poole family have proudly served customers since James Poole started stitching military uniforms during the Napoleonic Wars.
H Huntsman & Sons
11 Savile Row
Notable clients: Gianni Agnelli, David Bowie, Coco Chanel, Sir Winston Churchill www.huntsmansavilerow.com
With a history that stretches back over 170 years, bespoke tailor H Huntsman & Sons prides itself on its rich heritage. Located at 11 Savile Row, it creates the world’s finest hand-crafted clothes for discerning gentlemen and ladies, including a raft of notable names.
Huntsman’s extraordinary story serves as a reminder of the integrity and excellence that have defined the tailor’s suit for generations.
Holland & Sherry
31 Savile andsherry.comhttps://apparel.hollandRow
Since it was founded in London by Stephen George Holland and Frederick Sherry in 1836, cloth merchant Holland & Sherry has been supplying the most luxurious and highest-quality fabrics worldwide. It endeavours to create the finest cloths, furnishing the most prestigious tailors with superlative service and imparting its passion and knowledge along the way.
Holland & Sherry moved its business to Savile Row in 1982, and its premises at no. 31 are its global flagship for apparel.
JP Hackett
14 Savile www.hackett.comRow
Since its establishment in 1983 Hackett has grown to sit at the forefront of traditionally inspired men’s wear, and it has earned a dedicated global following. Today, the brand has more than 150 stores in over 30 countries, offering a perfect blend of evening formal wear and everydayOpenedseparates.in2019in the former studio of designer Sir Hardy Amies, the flagship Savile Row store is a sumptuous four-storey townhouse dedicated to bespoke and madeto-measure tailoring.
Maurice Sedwell
19 Savile www.mauricesedwell.comRow
Maurice Sedwell combines elegance, style and comfort with experienced cutting and bespoke tailoring skills. Established in 1938 in Fleet Street, it moved to Savile Row in 1963. It became the first Savile Row tailor to receive the Guild of Master Craftsmen’s accolade for Quality and Service and its Armorial Bearing for Skill and Integrity. Today, politicians, captains of industry and business people from all around the globe choose Maurice Sedwell with the knowledge and comfort that they will be dressed to perfection.
Norton & Sons
16 Savile www.nortonandsons.co.ukRow
Founded back in 1821 by Walter Norton, and originally located on the Strand, in the 1860s Norton & Sons moved to Savile Row. It has since been a bespoke and made-tomeasure tailor and shirtmaker to royal households around the world as well as three US presidents.
The house enjoyed a long association with famed British couturier Sir Hardy Amies, and to this day it works closely with the London, New York and Paris fashion industries, cutting and sewing tailored pieces for a long list of celebrated designers.
Ozwald Boateng
30 Savile Row
Notable clients: Jason Statham, Nick Moran, Will Smith, Jamie Foxx www.ozwaldboateng.co.uk
Ozwald Boateng has had a transformational impact on men’s fashion for nearly three decades, with a design aesthetic rooted in Savile Row traditions but defined by international style, detail and artistry.
His instinctive use of colour, cut and fabric fuses traditional classic British tailoring with a high-end modern design focus on the refinement of a man’s silhouette. This has brought tailoring to a whole new generation of men.
Richard Anderson
13 Savile www.richardandersonltd.comRow
Richard Anderson has made its mark on the tailoring world since opening its doors in 2001 – the first bespoke tailoring house to open on the Row in 50 years. It is proudly independently owned and operated by Richard Anderson and Brian Lishak, devoted craftsmen who have dressed every nationality, rank and personality around the world.
Together with its team of expert tailors, the company pride itself on the perfect fit, innovative designs, quality of service and, most importantly, making its customers look and feel their best.
Richard James
29 Savile Row, 19 Clifford Street
Notable clients: George Clooney, Hugh Grant, Tom Cruise www.richard-james.com
Founded on Savile Row in 1992 by designer Richard James and his business partner Sean Dixon, this tailoring business had a simple philosophy to produce classic men’s clothing and push the boundaries through colour, cut and design.
While Richard James’s ethos respected the 200-year-plus history of tailoring on Savile Row and each perfectly practiced tradition, it set out with a not-always-quiet determination to do things its own way.
www.scabal.com/en12ScabalSavileRow
Founded by Otto Hertz in 1938, Scabal has been a Savile Row fixture since 1972. As the world’s foremost producer of luxury fabrics, its collections can be found in elite tailors and fashion houses in over 80 countries. It also crafts its own-label tailoring collections in made to measure and ready to wear.
It is still privately owned, and its English weaving mill has been making fabrics since 1899. Its full European production uses the finest raw materials sourced directly from suppliers; from sheep to shop, Scabal guarantees the highest level of quality and service.
The Deck
19 Savile www.thedecklondon.comRow
Founded by Daisy Knatchbull in 2019, The Deck is the first shopfront on Savile Row for females, making elegant, contemporary and timeless suits and separates to complement all elements of a woman’s life.
Built on diversityempowerment,craftsmanship,sustainability,andcommunity,The Deck
offers women an alternative to the homogeneous global fashion houses that dominate what successful females wear. Garments are made to order using traditional techniques mixed with state-of-the-art technology.
&Sponsorspartners
for £1450, the Estate was handed down through many generations until it passed to the Reverend George Pollen in 1764, and then in turn to his five daughters.
A combination of family trusts descending from the daughters and additional investors have curated the Estate over the centuries, creating the impressive array of buildings and distinct culture of this area of East Mayfair. In 2014, Norges Bank Investment Management –Norway’s sovereign wealth fund – purchased a £381 million (64.2 percent) stake in the Estate from the Church Commissioners.
THE POLLEN Estate owns 45 buildings in East Mayfair. These include the significant majority of both Savile Row, the global centre for luxury bespoke men’s wear tailoring, as well as Cork Street, the London home of modern and contemporary art.
Dating back to 1645 when a merchant tailor called William Maddox purchased 35 acres of undeveloped land in East Mayfair
The world’s focus for bespoke tailoring centres on Savile Row, and The Pollen Estate continues to promote the area as a destination for high-class men’s and women’s wear.
The Concours on Savile Row is a project conceived by Hothouse Media and The Pollen Estate, to promote the bespoke craftsmanship that flourishes among the tailoring houses and the synergies these hold with bespoke automotive brands.
www.onsavilerow.com
ENABLING PARTNERRM SOTHEBY’S is excited to partner with the Concours on Savile Row. As a company with its European headquarters based in London, it is always delighted to support events in the capital, especially those that promote the world of classic cars and the hobby we all love. As a business that has been at the top of its game for over 40 years, RM Sotheby’s has a truly global footprint – and it’s benefited enormously from its association with Sotheby’s, one of the world’s most renowned auction houses.
RM Sotheby’s has a history of incredible results that spans decades and continues today. Aside from the passion and enthusiasm for cars that sit at the core of the company’s culture, the business is largely responsible for transforming the global automotive auction scene, helping elevate the perception of collector car auctions to premium
events executed at the same level as high-end art auctions. The company’s range of services – from live auctions, online-only events and private sales, to estate planning and financial services – coupled with an expert team of car specialists and an international footprint, provide an unsurpassed level of service to the global collector car market.
In 2007, RM expanded into Europe, hosting record-breaking auctions in Maranello, Italy, and London. As part of the company’s continued European expansion, RM introduced a new sale in Monaco in May 2010, held during the same weekend as the Grand Prix de Monaco Historique, and in 2011 the company hosted its debut sale at the Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este on the shores of Lake Como, Italy. In 2014, RM Sotheby’s further expanded its European arm with the establishment of a new sale in Paris, France, held during the worldfamous Rétromobile week.
More recently, the company hosted its first-ever boutique sale in Milan, Italy, and it continues to be the market leader in bringing the world’s single-owner collections to market. Also worthy of note is RM Sotheby’s partnership with Formula 1, which saw it conduct a groundbreaking auction at the F1 Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi Grand Prix –the Middle East’s first-ever major international collector car auction.
See online for further information, including details on how to consign your car to RM Sotheby’s London sale or to register to bid.
www.rmsothebys.com
SPONSORHAGERTY IS a specialty insurance provider focused on the global automotive enthusiast market, as well as an automotive enthusiast brand offering integrated membership programmes and products. It is home to Hagerty Drivers Club, Hagerty DriveShare, Hagerty Valuation Tools, Hagerty Media, Hagerty Drivers Club Magazine, MotorsportReg, Hagerty Garage + Social, plus events including the famed Amelia Island Concours d’Elegance (renamed The Amelia), Concours d’Elegance of America, Greenwich Concours d’Elegance, California Mille and Motorlux.
Hagerty offers a comprehensive range of insurance options to classic vehicle owners. As standard its
policies include features designed for classics, such as UK and EU roadside assistance and recovery, agreed value, salvage retention and more. Hagerty is rated excellent on TrustPilot, with a score of 4.9 out of more than 7400 reviews. Call 0333 323 0989 for more details. www.hagerty.co.uk
SPONSORAN ITALIAN goldsmith company that has become an international fine-jewellery brand, FOPE was established in 1929 in Vicenza, near Venice. It makes its signature collections in-house by combining traditional craftsmanship with cutting-edge technology.
The new men’s line is inspired by FOPE’s five best-selling collections. All crafted in Italy, they represent a unique experience of elegance and comfort thanks to Flex’it, a patented system of tiny gold springs that are hidden in the gold mesh and makes it stretchable. From the Flex’it bracelet (to wear next to a favourite timepiece) to the iconic cu inks, from the slim necklaces to the innovative Flex’it rings, this jewellery comes in white
or rose gold enriched with black diamonds – sometimes with accents of black rhodium for that extra touch of Designedmasculinity.withtoday’s dynamic and stylish man in mind, each piece embodies the concept of everyday luxury for any occasion. www.fope.com
SPONSORConcours
FOUNDED BY Louis-Ulysse Chopard in 1860, Chopard became renowned for innovative design and timing precision. The Scheufele family took over in the 1960s, and Chopard remains one of the last family-run watchmaking and jewellery companies in Switzerland.
Karl-Friedrich Scheufele is the copresident, and as such is responsible for the watch division. A passionate classic car collector, he forged one of the most enduring and successful partnerships in motor sport with Chopard’s sponsorship of the Mille Miglia. The Italian event began in 1927 as an open-road endurance race travelling from Brescia to Rome and back, taking in Ferrara, Cervia, San Marino, Sienna and Parma en route
– and covering 1000 miles. Today the Mille Miglia is a retrospective of the original race that ran for 24 editions until 1957. Each year Chopard creates a much-anticipated limited-edition watch to celebrate the event, the 40th edition of which will take place during the 2022 Concours on Savile Row. www.chopard.com
MAGNETO IS the awardwinning quarterly magazine for the most active participants at a global level in the classic and collector car market. In three years it has established itself as one of the most widely respected and influential publications in the world.
Magneto talks directly to those who enter concours, Historic motor sport and classic car tours, as well as who buy from international auction houses and dealers. Its readers are enormously enthusiastic about the classic car industry, and have the resources required to indulge their passion for their hobby to the full.
The editorial content of Magneto is produced only by the very best and most knowledgeable writers,
accompanied by images from the most creative photographers, and the magazine’s production values are of the highest quality.
www.magnetomagazine.com
MEDIA PARTNERDirectory
Adret
15C Clifford Street www.adret.co.uk
Anderson & Sheppard
17 Clifford Street, 32 Old Burlington Street www.anderson-sheppard.co.uk
Argent Timeless
36 Savile Row www.argenttimeless.com
Arthur Sleep
7-8 Savile Row www.arthursleepers.co.uk
Cad & The Dandy
7-8 Savile Row, 13 Savile Row www.cadandthedandy.co.uk
Chittleborough & Morgan
12 Savile Row www.chittleboroughandmorgan.co.uk
Cifonelli
16 Clifford Street www.cifonelli.com
clothsurgeon
40 Savile Row www.clothsurgeon.com
Connolly
4 Clifford Street www.connollyengland.com
Cremieux
37 Savile Row https://uk.cremieux.fr
Davies & Son
38 Savile Row www.daviesandson.com
Dege & Skinner
10 Savile Row www.dege-skinner.co.uk
Drake’s
9 Savile Row www.drakes.com
Ede & Ravenscroft
93 Chancery Lane www.edeandravenscroft.com
Edward Sexton
36 Savile Row, 26 Beauchamp Place www.edwardsexton.co.uk
Gaziano & Girling
39 Savile Row www.gazianogirling.com
Gieves & Hawkes
1 Savile Row www.gievesandhawkes.com
Henry Poole & Co
15 Savile Row www.henrypoole.com
Holland & Sherry
31 Savile Row https://apparel.hollandandsherry.com
H Huntsman & Sons
11 Savile Row www.huntsmansavilerow.com
JP Hackett
14 Savile Row www.hackett.com
Maurice Sedwell
19 Savile Row www.mauricesedwell.com
Norton & Sons
16 Savile Row www.nortonandsons.co.uk
Ozwald Boateng 30 Savile Row www.ozwaldboateng.co.uk
Richard Anderson 13 Savile Row www.richardandersonltd.com
Richard James 29 Savile Row, 19 Clifford Street www.richard-james.com
Scabal
12 Savile Row www.scabal.com/en
The Deck 19 Savile Row www.thedecklondon.com
The Service
32 Savile Row www.theservicelondon.com
Thom Sweeney 24C Old Burlington Street www.thomsweeney.com