In my previous job I used to travel to Hong Kong twice a year. Great place to go out, but not great shopping: all overpriced luxury brands or, at the other end of the spectrum, hard-sell tailors that would offer a ‘bespoke’ suit in 24 hours. So it was just my luck that the year I stopped visiting, Mark Cho set up The Armoury, a great menswear emporium just across the road from the office, in the Pedder Building.
Like any good emporium, it is a focused selection by a man with uncompromising views. It also stocks some familiar names with some less familiar ones. So alongside Drake’s, John Smedley and Gazinao & Girling, we have Florentine tailor Liverano & Liverano, Spanish shoemaker Carmina and glasses maker Nackymade.
I know Carmina fairly well, but not Liverano or Nackymade, so it’s fortunate that both will be in London at the end of this week as part of an Armoury pop-up shop. Antonio Liverano (top), founder and head cutter at the bespoke tailor will be there to show off his work and take any orders that men are inspired to make. And Naoki Nakagawa, the craftsman behind Nackymade glasses, will be equally receptive.
Liverano’s tailoring style is described as closer to the Milanese style than Neapolitan, being clean and sharp in construction, but with a certain unique eye for texture and colour – classic without being dowdy is the phrase used. Nakagawa, on the other hand, is a one-man operation from Kobe who specialises in bespoke designs and sizes – if you have trouble finding glasses that fit, he may be worth a visit.
The shop will be at the Rook & Raven Gallery, 7/8 Rathbone Place, just north of Tottenham Court Road tube, from this Friday to Sunday. The plan is that all Armoury artisans will visit over the next few months, and obviously the tailors will be back for fittings.
Do pop along.
I have to say, that's pretty much the opposite of everything I love about the Rifugio one. It's so showy and overdetailed. Much better with the nubuck finish, and it's all about the skin
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can you tell me what you mean between milan and naples tailoriong
Neapolitan tailoring is the most different from an English style: very soft, little or no shoulder padding, often a sleeve shoulder, a lot of curve to the outbreast and hip pockets. Milanese retains some of this softness but is more similar to English style in its sharpness of cut and classic shoulder line, sleeve attachment etc.
Search the blog for the Rubinacci jacket I had made and you’ll get a sense of Neapolitan tailoring
Simon, You say you know Carmina (Albadalejo) “fairly well”. How do their shoes compare in your opinion with Vass, G&G, EG, etc.?
Hi Inaki,
I’ve been to their stores in Madrid a few times, talked to the management there and tried the shoes on, but I don’t own a pair – so I don’t think I can make a straight comparison with EG, G&G etc.
Cheers
Simon