A tuxedo is the most formal garment most men ever own, and one of the most demanding to get right. It follows its own rules, uses fabrics and finishes you will not find on a business suit, and earns or loses its presence on small details that the wearer rarely notices but the room always does. Commissioned well, it is a garment that makes you look like you belong at the occasion. Commissioned carelessly, it makes you look like you do not.
Bangkok is an excellent city in which to commission one. The combination of skilled tailoring houses, access to fine European cloth and a long tradition of formal wear has produced a generation of tailors who understand the rules of black tie properly. Louis Collections has been a bespoke tailor in Bangkok since 1985, and tuxedos have been part of our work from the beginning. This guide explains what to expect when you commission one.
Tuxedo, dinner jacket and black tie are different names for the same family of garments, with small variations between American and British usage. What unites them is a set of fairly strict conventions.
These are not arbitrary. They are what make a tuxedo a tuxedo. A bespoke tailor follows them; a careless one will leave one out and hope nobody notices.
Within the conventions, there are real decisions to make. A good tuxedo tailor will guide you through each.
A tuxedo is half the outfit. The other half is the shirt and accessories, and a serious tailor will commission these alongside the jacket so they work as one. The conventions:
A black-tie event in Bangkok is a different proposition from one in London. A heavy traditional barathea will look superb on the cloth swatch and feel uncomfortable in a hotel ballroom in March. A serious Bangkok tailor will steer you accordingly.
If you intend to wear the tuxedo in both tropical and cooler climates, ask for a mid-weight wool that can handle either, rather than a specialised cloth that excels in only one.
A bespoke tuxedo at a serious Bangkok tailor follows the same sequence as any other bespoke garment, with a few touches specific to formal wear.
A standard bespoke tuxedo at Louis Collections takes between seven and fourteen days, with two to three fittings included. For an event with a fixed date, allow longer than this if you can; black tie repays the time spent on it.
None of these is fatal in isolation, but a tuxedo that gets several of them wrong stops looking like a tuxedo. The conventions are the garment.
Louis Collections has been making bespoke tuxedos and dinner jackets on Sukhumvit Road since 1985. Every tuxedo is cut from a fresh paper pattern, built around the conventions of black tie and refined across multiple fittings, with shirts and accessories available alongside if you wish to commission the whole outfit as one. Our work draws on a long tradition of custom suits Bangkok clients have trusted for decades, applied to the strictest formal wear with the same attention.
To arrange a consultation, visit https://www.louiscollectionsbangkok.com/contact/ or message us on WhatsApp at +66 (0) 81 825 5590.
A tuxedo is a strictly formal garment with satin or grosgrain silk facings on the lapels, jetted pockets without flaps, a satin or grosgrain stripe down the trouser leg, and trousers worn with braces rather than a belt. A regular suit has none of these features. Notch lapels do not belong on a true tuxedo.
Peak lapels or a shawl collar. Both are traditional and correct, with peak reading sharper and shawl reading slightly softer. Notch lapels are not used on a true tuxedo, however often they appear on cheaper versions.
Both are correct. Pure black is the formal default; midnight blue, a very deep navy, looks blacker than black under evening light and photographs beautifully. Many of the best-dressed men prefer midnight blue once they have worn one.
A mid-weight wool around Super 110s to 120s for general use, a lightweight tropical wool for primarily warm-weather wear, or a mohair blend for a sharp look in heat. Heavier traditional cloths like full-weight barathea can be uncomfortable in tropical settings.
A standard bespoke tuxedo at Louis Collections takes between seven and fourteen days, with two to three fittings included. Allow more time when possible, particularly for a fixed-date event, since black tie repays unhurried fittings.
Plain black leather oxfords or formal patent-leather pumps; a self-tied black silk bow tie; a white cotton shirt with a marcella or pleated front and a turndown or wing collar; a black silk cummerbund or waistcoat with a single-breasted tuxedo; and discreet studs and cufflinks in mother-of-pearl, onyx or simple metal.
