Skip to content

Cart

Your cart is empty

Orazio Luciano Wool & Cashmere Herringbone Jacket

48 IT / 38 US / Medium

Sale price€878 Regular price€2.798

In stock, ready to ship

Discover the Orazio Luciano Wool & Cashmere Herringbone Jacket, a timeless piece that exudes sophistication with a rich blend of wool and cashmere. This jacket is crafted in a classic herringbone pattern, offering a textured yet refined appearance, ideal for cooler months. The luxurious fabric combines the warmth of wool with the softness of cashmere, making it an effortlessly stylish layer for both formal and smart-casual settings. With soft shoulders and a minimally structured fit, this jacket reflects the signature Neapolitan tailoring that allows for comfort without sacrificing elegance.

Handmade in Naples by Orazio Luciano’s master tailors, this jacket embodies the finest in Italian craftsmanship. The wool-cashmere blend is carefully chosen for its balance of warmth, softness, and durability, while the hand-finished lapels, buttonholes, and seams highlight the artisanal skill behind every detail. Designed with precision and care, this herringbone jacket is a testament to Orazio Luciano's dedication to sartorial excellence, offering both timeless style and superior comfort. Discover the elaborated sartorial details below.

Orazio Luciano Wool & Cashmere Herringbone Jacket
Orazio Luciano Wool & Cashmere Herringbone Jacket Sale price€878 Regular price€2.798
DISCOVER THE
FULL-CANVAS-CONSTRUCTION

Discover the

Sartorial Details

FULL-CANVAS-CONSTRUCTION

Full Canvas Construction

A sartorial jacket - or coat - needs an interlining that will help give it shape and mold it. Canvas gives the item a tailored and crafted look. In short, it breathes life into it. Purely technical, canvas is made from either horsehair, wool, mohair or camel hair. It could also be a mix of them all, with varying thickness and weight. The canvas is stitched to the jacket, often by hand, thus making the canvas pieces 'floating' in the middle of the inner and outer cloth. This gives the jacket added flexibility. The canvas runs from the upper parts, all the way down to the end of the jacket. After you wear your canvassed suit for a while, it will begin to take your shape and look incredibly natural.

La Spalla Camicia

Spalla Camicia roughly translates to 'shirt sleeve' in Italian and is a shoulder style created and popularized by Neapolitan tailors. The name 'shirt sleeve' was so coined due to the characteristic shirring found at the sleeve's head where the fullness of the larger sleeve collapses. Rather than having the head of the sleeve turned back and stitched inside, the head is lapped under and stitched along the top.

Neapolitan Buttonhole

The buttonhole preferred by tailors in Naples, Italy. The Neapolitan is a slightly shorter and thicker style of handmade buttonhole. It has a distinct opening at the end, which opens wider than any other buttonhole.

2.5 Button Closure

The ‘tre bottoni stirato a due’, also known as the three rolling on two lapel style, is perhaps the most infamous characteristic of the Neapolitan style jacket. The top button and buttonhole are ornamental, so are left unbuttoned. As the lapel rolls down it elegantly folds over the top button and stops just 4 cm above the second button creating the distinct roll of the lapel the style is known for. As it is intended to remain unbuttoned, the top buttonhole is actually made inside out so the beautiful side will still be visible.

Barchetta Chest Pocket

The barchetta pocket is often thought to be a tailoring detail exclusively from Italy. The word “barchetta” is Italian for “little boat.” It describes how the pocket floats on the chest, gently angled upwards, like the bow of a sailboat.

Neapolitan Darts

Neapolitan master tailors add two darts - think of them as pinched seams - to ensure the jacket’s body achieves a slim silhouette. The process, called mezzo punto riprese, is done entirely by hand.

Kissing Buttons and Handmade Buttonholes

Also known as stacked buttons or waterfall buttons, kissing buttons are associated with Italian tailoring as Italian tailors make their jacket sleeve buttons in the kissing style. In this style, buttons touch each other and overlap one another. Handmade buttonholes; Even this step, apparently the simplest, is treated with an abundance of detail. Attaching the buttons is a job that requires patience and must be completed to perfection.

Patch Pocket

Patch pockets, with their rugged functionality, were unsurprisingly adopted by the military for both shirts and jackets. The lower patch pockets on a Neapolitan jacket are modeled after the tasca a pignata style, and when done in its purest form, are easily recognizable with a rounded-bottom and a unique shape

size

48 IT / 38 US / Medium

Carbon-neutral shipping with Shopify Planet
Carbon-neutral shipping on all orders