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Savile Row Collection
The Savile Row Collection from Hackett London is the main line of the house: a complete menswear range that applies the construction principles of classic British tailoring to every category of the wardrobe, from the suit to the polo shirt.
What Savile Row stands for
Savile Row is the London street where bespoke tailoring found its definitive form, and the name Hackett London chose for its most exacting line. The Savile Row Collection is neither a ceremonial capsule nor a limited run: it is the central axis of the house's offer, built on pieces that share a single construction logic — carefully sourced materials, refined patterns, and finishing details that reveal themselves in the wearing rather than in the looking.
The cloths that define the Savile Row Collection do not change with trends: wools of British origin, long-staple two-ply pima cotton, Harris Tweed with protected designation of origin, double-twisted cashmere. The palette stays with navy, grey, camel and burgundy — with considered incursions into bottle green and tobacco brown that give the line movement without disrupting its coherence.
What the collection covers
The Savile Row Collection covers the full wardrobe: floating-canvas suits, blazers in seasonal cloths, trousers with precise fall, shirts in high-density poplin and Oxford weave, polo shirts in pima cotton, knitwear in merino and cashmere, double-faced wool coats, vegetable-tanned leather footwear and complementing accessories. No category is treated as secondary: every piece answers to the same standards of material selection and the same level of construction quality.
How to wear the Savile Row Collection
The Savile Row Collection is designed to work together — the pieces share a chromatic and constructive logic that makes combination straightforward. Two specific proposals:
Floating-canvas suit, white poplin shirt, woven silk tie and calf-leather Oxford: the complete composition for an occasion that requires presence from the first moment.
Savile Row blazer over chino, pima cotton polo shirt without a tie and leather loafer: the register drops to Smart Casual without a single piece losing its character.
The collection also works beyond its own boundaries: a Savile Row Collection blazer over dark denim and Chelsea boots is not a contradiction — it is the argument for what a quality cut can do across registers.
Why this collection carries this name
The name is not decorative. The pieces of the Savile Row Collection are built on patterns that Hackett London has developed since its founding in 1983, revised season by season with the same cloths and the same criteria that define the tailoring of the street the line is named after. Floating canvas in the jackets, flat internal seams, silk-mix linings: these are manufacturing decisions with a measurable cost and a measurable result — not a branding promise.
What distinguishes the Savile Row Collection from Hackett's other lines?
The Savile Row Collection is the principal and most demanding line of the house. It concentrates the most carefully selected materials — certified-origin wools, double-twisted cashmere — and the most considered constructive details: floating canvas, hand pick-stitched lapels, natural horn buttons. Other lines share the identity of the house but answer to different price and usage criteria.
Is the Savile Row Collection suitable for everyday use?
Yes — that is the intention. The collection includes everyday pieces, shirts, polo shirts, knitwear, chinos, that share the same standard of quality as the suits. A Savile Row Collection Oxford shirt or a pima cotton polo shirt from the line wears daily without question and improves with every wash. Quality amortises itself not at special occasions but precisely in regular use.
How often is the Savile Row Collection updated?
The collection is updated each season with new cloths, colours and proposals. But it maintains a stable core of permanent pieces that do not rotate — suits in navy and grey, wool blazers, poplin shirts and merino knitwear that define the identity of the line. Seasonal renewal coexists with a fundamental continuity that gives the line its coherence over time.





