Alex has written for Vanity Fair, Barrons, Bloomberg and Condé…
We love the look of Caruso’s new signature line.
When Werner Baldessarini launched his upscale signature clothing label in 1993, the longtime creative director and one-time chief executive of Hugo Boss went to Italian suit maker Alberto Caruso to help produce the collection. Back then Caruso, whose factory is located in an industrial area just outside of picturesque Parma, Italy, was using machines in place of manpower to create its low-cost Neapolitan-inspired suits (a nod to the Caruso family’s Naples origins). “It was Mr. Baldessarini that taught me to find the quality and underline it,” says Caruso who, with Baldessarini’s help, completely retooled his factory in the mid-1990s with high-tech computers that could streamline pattern making and production. He also built a new factory adjacent to the one he already had and hired master tailors capable of adding the finishing details?canvas inner linings, hand-sewn button holes, shirt set-in sleeves?considered hallmarks of high-end suit making. – From Robb Report
Alex has written for Vanity Fair, Barrons, Bloomberg and Condé Nast Traveler.