
2010s · 2020s · Western
Production
ready-to-wear
Material
wool blend
Culture
Western
Movement
Power Dressing · Gorpcore
Influences
1980s corporate uniform · Savile Row tailoring
A sharply tailored two-piece business suit featuring a structured blazer with notched lapels and matching trousers. The charcoal gray wool blend fabric has a smooth, professional finish. The blazer displays classic power dressing proportions with defined shoulder lines and a fitted waist. Worn with a burgundy tie and crisp white dress shirt, the ensemble exemplifies 1980s corporate menswear. The suit's construction emphasizes authority through precise tailoring, clean lines, and substantial fabric weight. The overall silhouette projects confidence and professional competence typical of the power dressing movement.


These two jackets trace a direct line from Savile Row's golden age to its contemporary echoes—the 1970s navy piece carries that era's fuller cut and soft shoulder construction that made British tailoring globally coveted, while the 2010s charcoal blazer shows how those same proportions were streamlined for modern corporate life.
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These two jackets trace a direct line from Savile Row's golden age to its contemporary echoes—the 1970s navy piece carries that era's fuller cut and soft shoulder construction that made British tailoring globally coveted, while the 2010s charcoal blazer shows how those same proportions were streamlined for modern corporate life.
These two suits speak the same language of masculine authority, separated by three decades of evolving power codes. The 1980s navy blazer carries that era's signature bulk—broader shoulders, fuller chest, the kind of imposing silhouette that announced presence before you even opened your mouth. The contemporary charcoal suit has shed that theatrical padding for a leaner, more athletic cut that still commands respect but whispers rather than shouts.


These two suits speak the same language of masculine authority, separated by three decades of evolving power codes. The 1980s navy blazer carries that era's signature bulk—broader shoulders, fuller chest, the kind of imposing silhouette that announced presence before you even opened your mouth. The contemporary charcoal suit has shed that theatrical padding for a leaner, more athletic cut that still commands respect but whispers rather than shouts.