Of all the suits a man commissions in his life, the wedding suit is the one he will be photographed in most carefully and remember most clearly. It deserves the time and thought that follows from that. It also deserves a tailor who understands that the suit must do two things at once: look exceptional on the day, and remain a suit you actually want to wear afterwards.
Bangkok is one of the world’s great cities for commissioning a wedding suit. A long tailoring tradition, direct access to Italian and English mills, and a climate that has shaped its own approach to warm-weather suiting all play in your favour. Louis Collections has been a bespoke tailor in Bangkok since 1985, and grooms have been part of our work for as long as we have been open. This guide is for any groom planning a wedding suit in Bangkok, whether the event itself is here or elsewhere.
Before you discuss style, settle the practical questions that will shape every later decision.
Grooms have more licence than they realise. A wedding is one of the few occasions where a man can take a more distinctive route without it feeling overdressed. That said, restraint usually photographs better than fashion.
For a wider view of style choices that apply to grooms as much as anyone else, our companion guide to custom suits Bangkok covers single versus double breasted, two piece versus three, lapels and silhouettes in greater detail.
The classic wedding colours endure because they photograph beautifully and date least.
Climate is the question grooms underestimate most. A heavy English worsted that looks superb on the bolt can be uncomfortable in a Bangkok ceremony, and an exhausted-looking groom is not the goal.
Tell your tailor where the wedding will be, what time of day, and how warm the venue is likely to feel. The fabric conversation becomes a short list rather than an overwhelming one.
Small choices, well made, are what lift a wedding suit from correct to genuinely yours.
A wedding suit is not a last-week purchase. A few sensible rules:
We have been making wedding suits for grooms on Sukhumvit Road since 1985. Every suit is drafted from a fresh paper pattern, cut and built around your body and posture, refined across multiple fittings and finished by hand where it matters. We guide grooms through the choices set out above, from setting and silhouette to fabric and detail, and stay focused on a suit that looks exceptional on the day and serves you well long afterwards.
To arrange a consultation, visit louiscollectionsbangkok.com/contact or message us on WhatsApp at +66 (0) 81 825 5590.
For a versatile, photogenic suit that wears beautifully and serves you afterwards, single breasted in midnight blue or navy with peak or notch lapels is hard to beat. A three piece adds traditional formality if the dress code or the day calls for it.
Mid-weight Italian wool around Super 120s is the most adaptable everyday choice. A tropical weight wool, around 200 to 260 grams, is excellent for warm ceremonies. A wool-linen blend or pure linen suits the most relaxed tropical settings.
Midnight blue tends to photograph more flatteringly than navy, particularly under evening light, while still reading as classic. Navy and charcoal are the next strongest choices, and both age well in photographs.
Start at least eight weeks before the wedding, and longer for elaborate construction. That gives room for the consultation, two or three fittings, and a final fitting close enough to the day that your suit is unmistakably yours.
A three piece is more formal and traditional and photographs beautifully. A two piece is lighter, more comfortable in heat and more wearable afterwards. Either is correct; the choice depends on the setting and how often you want to wear the suit again.
Yes, if you choose it with that in mind. Classic colours, conservative lapels and a moderate silhouette make a wedding suit a strong addition to a working wardrobe. More distinctive choices, while beautiful, can be harder to wear again.
