Tartan Comes to the Hideaway – Getting Ready for Robbie Burns Suppers

Sexy, Sexy Scottish Pipers

Sexy, Sexy Scottish Pipers

Robbie Burns Suppers are held in late January to celebrate the best of Scottish culture as exemplified in the writings of Robert ‘Robbie’ Burns.
To help the proper gentleman get in the spirit Kingpin’s Hideaway has tartaned up the place!

A Tartan For Every Mood

A Tartan For Every Mood

All you need is Tartan! (...and a decent pair of brogues)

All you need is Tartan! (...and a decent pair of brogues)

Tweed jacket with wool Kilt and Masonic Jewels

Tweed jacket with wool Kilt and Masonic Jewels

Brogues, Scotch Whiskey, Kilts and Sexy Pipers - A perfect Robbie Burns Supper!

Brogues, Scotch Whiskey, Kilts and Sexy Pipers - A perfect Robbie Burns Supper!

Gentlemen’s Fabrics 101 – Wool

Wool is the earliest fabric Europeans clothed themselves with. It is a natural fibre that is collected from domesticated sheep and goats, as well as other animals. For our purposes here, wool includes the hairs sheared, plucked or gathered from various animals.

Swiss Cashmere Goats

Swiss Cashmere Goats

A short survey of the animals that supply wool and the names given each type are listed:

While some of these wool fibres are quite exotic, and hence very expensive, others are in common use in the production of gentlemenswear. The wool from sheep is the primary source of the wool  used to make suits, blazers and trousers. Some of the more expensive wool is used to make accessories likes scarves, gloves and hats, although the cashmere blazer is a fantastic addition to any gentleman’s wardrobe!

Thom Browne Striped Merino Blazer

Thom Browne Striped Merino Blazer

The process of turning raw animal fibres into usable wool threads is fairly standard across the many animals the produce usable hair fibres. The first step is to gather the hair through either shearing, combing or plucking. After the hair is gathered, and depending on the source animal, it needs to be cleaned in a process called scouring. The steps in the scouring range from simple hot water to detergent and other chemicals depending on the source animal and the intended use of the wool. Many types of wool have high levels of oils, sometimes called wool wax, which has to be removed, and hopefully recovered, as it is a valuable resource of its own, producing lanolin.

Vicuña Mens Scarf

Vicuña Mens Scarf

The scoured wool is then carded and then sometimes combed. The final product is then either spun into yarn or made into felt. For our purposes, the yarn  is used to make garments and the felt is used for hats. Virgin wool is wool created from the first spinning of the fibres. If the wool was also combed, the fibres have been straightened to the point of making the yarn quite strong and smooth.

The different kinds of wool fabric created from the different breeds and species are wide ranging in weight, texture and tactility. These fabrics form the foundation of gentlemen’s fashion, from elegant suits and tuxedos to coats, scarves and fedoras. But more on that later…

Article first published as Fabrics For Gentlemen 101 – Wool on Technorati.

Gentlemen’s Fabrics 101 – Linen

Cary Grant in Linen Jacket and Trousers

Cary Grant in Linen Jacket and Trousers

Just as ancient China lays claim to the production of silk, ancient Egypt brought the world linen. Linen is the fabric made from the fibre of the plant flax, Linum usitatissimum. Egyptians are recorded as having linen production as far back as 4 000 years and archeologists have discovered linen fragments near human encampments from 10 000 years ago, with some suspected dyed flax fibres being used for clothing as far back as 38 000 years ago.

The Flax Plant - Linum usitatissimum

The Flax Plant - Linum usitatissimum

The process to produce usable fibres from flax to spin into yarn and thread is labour intensive, hence the higher price for linen garments. The flax seeds must first be removed from the plant in a process called rippling. the stacks must then have the cellulose on the plant separated from the plant’s fibres through retting, where bacteria dissolve the unneeded cellulose. Next the flax stacks are scutched which removes all the woody material, as well as the oil, the source of linseed oil. Once scutched, heckling, through the use of the heckling comb, separates the short fibres from the long, where they can then be spun into yarn and thread and then woven into linen. Whew!

Cary Grant Traveling in a Double-breasted Linen Suit

Cary Grant Traveling in a Double-breasted Linen Suit

And taking our cue from style icon Cary Grant, linen is an ideal fabric for attaining Kingpin chic. Will over at The Houndstooth Kid extols the virtues of wearing linen. His most convincing point? It travels well. Very well.

It wrinkles. It’s supposed to wrinkle. A linen suit or jacket without wrinkles is like a car without wheels: they just have to be there for it to work. And since we sit for long periods of time when we travel, our clothes tend to wrinkle even if they aren’t supposed to.

Linen shirts, trousers, jackets suits and shorts are ideal for keeping your cool in the coming summer heat, and looking damn fine doing so!

Article first published as Summer’s Coming, Where’s Your Linen? on Technorati.

Gentlemen’s Fabrics 101 – Cotton

Cotton fibre is much more than the fluff that allows the seeds to disperse from the plant genus Gossypium; it is the most useful plant material humans have had for the past 8 000 years (that we can’t eat). Both the New and Old worlds separately learned to cultivate wild cotton shrubs and take the fibre from the seed capsule, or boll, and spin it into yarn or thread creating a versatile fabric and a $12 billion a year industry.

Cotton in a Flannel Weave

Cotton in a Flannel Weave

There are two different ways to organize types of cotton; its source plant and the type of processing the cotton fibre has undergone. The plant sources of cotton fibre fall into two categories; upland and Pima cotton. Upland cotton is a more versatile plant but produces an inferior fibre quality that is not as high as Pima. Pima (also called ELS) produces the high quality cotton fibres used to make high fashion fabric. ELS stands for Extra Long Staple. It references to the length of the cotton fibre, the longer, the stronger the fibre. Egyptian cotton is an ELS cotton grown in Egypt.

Cotton in a Poplin Weave

Cotton in a Poplin Weave

The different methods used to process cotton into a cloth fabric create twill, damask, velvet, velour and poplin among many others. Of interest to the properly attired gentleman are the following types:

  • Terry Cloth : A cotton fabric with moisture-absorbing loop pile covering the entire surface on one or both sides. They make excellent robes for use pool-side.
  • Jersey : A single-knit, plain-stitched fabric with a face side that is distinctly different from the back side. Jersey is used to make undershirts.
  • Sateen : A satin weave fabric with a smooth, lustrous surface.
  • Broadcloth : A tightly woven lustrous cotton cloth with fine embedded crosswide ribs. It is used to make shirts.
  • Damask : A patterned cotton fabric made on a jacquard loom. It is used to make decorative fabrics.
  • Combed Cotton : The combing process removes the short fibers and any debris that might be in the cotton fibre. A cleaner, more uniform and lustrous yarn results.
  • Velvet : A warp-pile fabric with short, densely woven cut pile, giving the fabric a soft, rich texture.
  • Twill : Identified by the diagonal lines on its face. It is an incredibly versatile fabric.
  • Interlock : A double-knit, plain-stitched fabric that looks the same on both sides. Used in polo shirts.
Cotton in an Oxford Weave

Cotton in an Oxford Weave

  • Cambric or chambray : First used in Cambrai, France, as early as 1595, It is a closely woven, firm fabric with a slight glossy surface produced by calendering. A plain-weave fabric made of color warp yarn and white fill yarn. Used in making
  • Duck : Also known as canvas. A rugged plain-weave cloth used in workwear and outdoor clothing.
  • Oxford : A group of cotton fabrics, including pinpoint, made with a modified plain or basket weave. Used primarily for shirts.
  • Seersucker : A lightweight cotton fabric with a woven crinkle achieved by altering tension in the warp yarns. Seersucker is synonymous with the classic summer suit.
  • Poplin : A fabric with a fine horizontal rib effect on the surface because of a warp yarn finer than the filling yarn; usually a high-thread-count cloth. High-quality shirts use Poplin.
  • Flannel : A plain-weave cloth heavily brushed for softness.
  • Corduroy : A ribbed, pile fabric. Comes in various weights and weaves.
  • Denim : A rugged, durable twill fabric that is most popular in indigo blue.
  • Velour : A term applied to cut pile cloths in general. Velour is soft, luxurious and widely used.
Cotton in a Twill Weave

Cotton in a Twill Weave

Cotton is the staple of a gentleman’s wardrobe. Shirts, jackets, trousers, trench coats, and suits all present themselves in the various flavours of cotton. I will examine these, and more about cotton in coming posts.