Adrien Sauvage is Redefining the Suit for the Modern Gentleman

We may not be wearing a lot of suits right now, but when we do, it would be hard to transition to stuffy garments after months of loose loungewear, and this is something Adrien Sauvage understands all too well. “Chic is dead—this is the louche era,” says the former professional basketball player and regular on the London social scene.

Adrien Sauvage creates bespoke suits for the modern man
Image courtesy of Robb Report

In 2010, Adrien Sauvage launched his eponymous brand, A. Sauvage, after noticing a lack of sex appeal within menswear’s top tier. “I wouldn’t be wearing what Winston Churchill was wearing,” Sauvage says of the Savile Row firms he frequented. So he set off on his own path, doing old-world tailoring but for the 21st-century beau monde.

Now based in Los Angeles, he takes traditionally debonair trappings and injects them with a sense of ease, often with a nod to his Ghanaian-Nigerian roots. Case in point: tapping a 300-year-old British mill to weave jacquard fabrics based on motifs from the ancient African empire of Benin. With a penchant for silk blends, mohair and velvet, Adrien Sauvage infuses his rakish double-breasted suits, smoking jackets and razor-sharp trousers with a low-key decadence. He describes his style as being somewhere between Roger Moore and Curtis Mayfield—slick but soulful.

A. Sauvage overcoat
Image courtesy of A. Sauvage

While the recently launched online shop sells the brand’s other offerings – scarves and jewellery – made-to-measure and bespoke are the fullest expression of the A. Sauvage aesthetic, which has drawn the likes of Robert Downey Jr. and LeBron James. Despite his modern sensibility, Sauvage enjoys the intimacy of old-school fittings. “Your tailor is your guide in creating a style. You’re growing with them,” he says.

Image courtesy of A, Sauvage

More than just making clothes, Sauvage says, he aims to impart swagger, imbuing his clients with some of his own devil-may-care attitude on the way to “building a wardrobe so men can dress easy.”

Source: Robb Report

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