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Winkelwagen

Je winkelwagen is leeg

The details you only notice up close. Every piece, no exceptions.

A Buyer’s Guide

5 signs a brand actually cares about craftsmanship

And how to spot them before you buy.

The dirty secret of affordable menswear isn’t the fabric you can see. It’s everything you can’t.

Start the checklist

A shirt can photograph beautifully and fall apart in three washes. A jacket can look sharp on a model and feel hollow the moment you put it on. A pair of trousers can hang perfectly on a hanger and bag at the knee by noon.

This isn’t an accident. It’s a strategy. When brands compete on price, something has to give — and the cuts they make are almost never visible in a product photo, because they’re smart enough to know that’s where you’re looking. Instead, they cut the things you only discover when the garment is in your hands.

These aren’t small details. They’re the difference between a garment that holds its shape for three or four years — and one that looks good in October and tired by January.

This piece isn’t a brand pitch. It’s a buyer’s guide: five things worth checking before you hand over money for any piece of menswear. By the end, you’ll never look at a product photo the same way again.

Sign 01

The lining — the first thing cut, the first thing you’ll notice

Linings are expensive: extra fabric, extra pattern pieces, extra labour. So when margins get squeezed, the lining is the first to go — or get quietly downgraded to a thin layer that shifts and bunches inside the shell. You feel it within an hour; the garment moves independently of your body instead of with it. Unlined isn’t the problem — unlined done wrong is.

Spot it

Turn the garment inside out. Look for clean, finished interior joins and tacking stitches at the hem. Raw edges left to fend for themselves are a tell.

Sign 02

Buttons & buttonholes — the detail that exposes everything

Cheap buttons are hollow resin attached with minimal thread; buttonholes are machine-finished on the fastest setting and fray after a few washes.

Spot it

Press a button between your fingers — quality ones (horn, corozo, mother of pearl) have density and don’t flex. Check the thread shank lets the button sit level. Run a fingernail along the buttonhole edge; a cheap one feels springy because it’s already fraying.

Sign 03

The trims & finishing — what happens at the edges

Most men never look at a seam. Brands know this. So when margins get tight, finishing is the first thing to go: raw edges left unfinished inside the garment, hems glued rather than stitched, side seams that splay after three washes. You can’t see any of it in a photo. You find out six months later when the thing looks wrecked.

Spot it

Turn the trousers inside out. Look at the inner-leg seam and waistband join — clean and overlocked, or raw and fraying? Check the hem: folded and double-stitched holds; a single stitch with a glue strip won’t survive washing.

Sign 04

Fabric & material quality — beyond the label

“100% cotton.” “Premium fabric.” These phrases mean almost nothing without context. Yarn weight, weave tightness, and finishing are what separate a fabric that drapes and holds its shape from one that pills, thins, and bags at the knees. The tell isn’t the label. It’s how the fabric behaves under load.

Spot it

Grip the fabric lightly and release. Quality springs back; low-grade holds the crease or stays distorted. For technical fabrics, hold it to the light — see-through at rest means it won’t perform under movement.

Sign 05

Construction — structured vs. fused, and why it matters long-term

This one’s almost impossible to see, which is exactly why most brands ignore it. Structure comes two ways: fusing (gluing a stiff interlining with heat) or proper stitched interfacing. Fusing is faster and cheaper — it also bubbles after cleaning and gives that cardboard-chest look after eighteen months.

Spot it

Pinch the lapel and roll it. Fused feels stiff and boardy and springs back flat. Stitched construction has a soft, living roll — the lapel curves and holds without a hard crease. Hold the chest to the light and flex it: rippling under the cloth is fusing starting to separate.

TrustScore 5.0 | 532 reviews

Great quality, great service and great staff. I recommend everyone

- Thomas

TrustScore 5.0 | 532 reviews

Amazing store and amazing helpful employees. Great quality products

- Rico

TrustScore 5.0 | 532 reviews

Perfect store, really friendly employees and they take all the time for you

- Dario

Now you know where to look

The small things, done properly.

Check any piece before you buy — including ours. We built every garment assuming you would.

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