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Ermenegildo Zegna Royal Blue Gingham Check Jacket

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Ermenegildo Zegna Royal Blue Gingham Check Jacket

This single breasted jacket is cut from Zegna’s luxury in-house lightweight wool in a gingham check pattern. Notch lapels, flap pockets, double side vents and 2.5 button closure. Discover the elaborated sartorial details below.

By the time a Ermenegildo Zegna garment ends up hanging in an enthusiasts wardrobe, more than 500 hands will have touched it. They start their work by shearing the wool, weaving it, bundling it, dyeing it, knitting it, ironing it, cutting it, sewing it, ironing it again (and again). In Trivero, Piedmont, Zegna turns wool into cloth, and then sends it to the artisanal suit factory at Stabio, on the Swiss side of the Italian border, where the cloth becomes a tailored garment. What is thought to be simple is actually difficult, and what is thought to be done by machine is basically done by people, at a sophisticated level.

This single breasted jacket is cut from Zegna’s luxury in-house lightweight wool in a gingham check pattern. Notch lapels, flap pockets, double side vents and 2.5 button closure. Discover the elaborated sartorial details below.

By the time a Ermenegildo Zegna garment ends up hanging in an enthusiasts wardrobe, more than 500 hands will have touched it. They start their work by shearing the wool, weaving it, bundling it, dyeing it, knitting it, ironing it, cutting it, sewing it, ironing it again (and again). In Trivero, Piedmont, Zegna turns wool into cloth, and then sends it to the artisanal suit factory at Stabio, on the Swiss side of the Italian border, where the cloth becomes a tailored garment. What is thought to be simple is actually difficult, and what is thought to be done by machine is basically done by people, at a sophisticated level.

$221.99

Original: $634.26

-65%
Ermenegildo Zegna Royal Blue Gingham Check Jacket—

$634.26

$221.99

Description

This single breasted jacket is cut from Zegna’s luxury in-house lightweight wool in a gingham check pattern. Notch lapels, flap pockets, double side vents and 2.5 button closure. Discover the elaborated sartorial details below.

By the time a Ermenegildo Zegna garment ends up hanging in an enthusiasts wardrobe, more than 500 hands will have touched it. They start their work by shearing the wool, weaving it, bundling it, dyeing it, knitting it, ironing it, cutting it, sewing it, ironing it again (and again). In Trivero, Piedmont, Zegna turns wool into cloth, and then sends it to the artisanal suit factory at Stabio, on the Swiss side of the Italian border, where the cloth becomes a tailored garment. What is thought to be simple is actually difficult, and what is thought to be done by machine is basically done by people, at a sophisticated level.