Guide
How to measure
A few accurate measurements make choosing a size simple. Measure yourself with a soft tape over underwear or a thin t-shirt. Keep the tape flat and snug, but not tight. If you can, ask someone to help.
Key measurements
- Chest
- Around the fullest part of the chest, tape under the arms and level across the back.
- Waist
- At the natural waistline, where the body bends side to side. Don’t hold your breath.
- Hips
- Around the widest part of the hips.
- Shoulders
- Across the back, from the edge of one shoulder to the other.
- Sleeve
- From the shoulder seam to the wrist, with a slight bend in the arm.
- Neck
- Around the base of the neck; for dress shirts add 1 cm for comfort.
- Inseam
- Along the inside of the leg, from the crotch to the desired trouser length.
Suits & jackets
Sizes are even numbers — 44, 46, 48 … 70. As a guide, your jacket size is roughly your chest in centimetres divided by two (a 100 cm chest ≈ size 50). Take your chest, shoulder and sleeve measurements.
Trousers
We label trousers by half-waist: the size number is half your waist measurement in centimetres. An 84 cm waist is size 42. Take your waist, hips and inseam.
Shirts & polos
Letter sizes: S, M, L, XL, 2XL … 7XL. Go by your chest first, and for dress shirts by your neck as well.
Footwear
European sizes 41–45. Measure your foot length in centimetres in the evening (feet are slightly larger later in the day) and check it against the table on the product page.
Accessories
Ties, bow ties, pocket squares and belts are one size.