The Rake

BRIGHT LIGHTS, BIG CITY: HUNTSMAN AND THE RAKE’S NEW YORK CITY-INSPIRED CAPSULE COLLECTION

Source: Charcoal urban tweed hacking jacket, Huntsman for The Rake; claret twill stripe spread collar shirt, Huntsman for The Rake; steel grey shantung grenadine silk tie, Huntsman for The Rake; and pleated charcoal flannel trousers, Huntsman for The Rake.

Allen Ginsberg’s poem hits you like a concussive hollow-point double-tap to the soul. This is his paean and plea, his discourse and dogma cry out for insurrection and revolution, and it is set — and could only be set — in the greatest of all cities, the churning crucible of music, art, film and literature known as New York. Like Ginsberg, who commemorates this ultimate collision between high and low with, “angel headed hipsters burning for the ancient heavenly connection to the starry dynamo in the machinery of the night”, a slew of literary greats have selected the throbbing concrete metropolis as their muse. From Fitzgerald to Anne Ryan to Salinger, Hubert Selby, Jr. to Mario Puzo, from Mark Helprin’s to McInerney’s , New York has inspired innumerable efforts to perfectly encapsulate its eternal dynamism, its inimitable vibrancy and its extraordinary resilience. It is to New York that Savile Row tailors H. Huntsman — the legendary firm that has clothed the likes of Humphrey Bogart, Gianni Agnelli and Gregory Peck — and dedicate their latest collaboration, in the form of a capsule collection inspired by the city’s unmistakable, dazzling nocturnal skyline.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Rake

The Rake1 min read
Baste Instinct
GROOMING: TYLER JOHNSTON AT ONE REPRESENTS FASHION ASSISTANT: HELLY PRINGLE MODELS: O’SHEA AT SELECT AND ROBERTAS AT CHAPTER ■
The Rake3 min read
Street Cred
When this issue’s assignment was presented to me, I wanted to shift my gaze from the U.K. and immerse myself in other cultures and architecture. What I discovered was that the most attractive places to live manage to harmonise architecture with the n
The Rake5 min read
The Feast Of Saint Raul
There’s a scene in the 1993 movie Addams Family Values — the antic sequel to the earlier smash hit showcasing the ghoulish clan who reside at 001 Cemetery Lane — in which Gomez, played by Raul Julia, twirls Anjelica Houston’s Morticia around in a tan

Related Books & Audiobooks