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- Issue #19 | A pork chop from Texas?!
Issue #19 | A pork chop from Texas?!
Plus elevated leisure wear for cozy days and the return of tailoring
Welcome to Style Uncut. The latest and greatest in men’s fashion and style brought direct to your inbox every week.

New drop from London’s Cole Buxton
London leisurewear brand Cole Buxton has been a favourite of ours for a long time and this week we wanted to highlight a new drop of theirs. This ultra soft merino knitted sweater has been knitted with a textured boucle yarn in an oversized silhouette with a loose waistband perfect for layering in winter. It also features an italic CB left chest emblem knitted into the garment using a traditional intarsia technique.
Founded by Cole Buxton and Jonny Wilson the brand launched with a tight range of high quality heavyweight sweats and has now expanded into a full selection of casual wear always adhering to the oversized relaxed aesthetic that has won them loyal fans around the world.
Check out their latest drop here.

A pork chop from Texas
We’ve also had our eye turned by this amusingly named pork chop jacket by Texas brand Stan Ray. Founded in Texas in 1972, Stan Ray make clothes that are designed for wear and movement, with minimum fuss and maximum practicality, for rough work or lateral living. Stan Ray products are durable, all-purpose, honest. Seen here in a classic khaki duck the jacket is lined internally for comfort and with elasticated cuffs, easy access hand warmer pockets, double chest pockets and with a button fastening front.
Focussing on tough outerwear the collection also includes vests, dungarees and work pants made from traditional materials with a modern slant.
You can shop their latest pieces over on their website.

Men Are Back!
With suits and ties, the Fall 2024 season heralded a return of traditional masculinity according to Vogue.
The official start to the men’s fall 2024 collections came with Sabato De Sarno’s debut menswear show for Gucci, with an addition to his spring women’s soundtrack created by Mark Ronson and titled “Masculinity.” We should’ve known then and there that the season would unfold as an examination of contemporary masculinity starting from its core sartorial tenet: the suit.
Gone are the days of the genderless and the gender-bending taking center stage on the runways. Menswear has moved on from both the streetwear phenomenon that questioned its rules and formality, and the irreverent flamboyance of skirts and frilly blouses. Even the Princess Anne-inspired pleated skorts at Fendi gave no way to gender ambiguity; a man in a skirt on the runways just isn’t the grand statement it was two years ago. The radicalism is gone and the message is clear: Fall was a season about safe, by-the-book masculine codes.
Read the full article on the Vogue website.

Latest pick ups
Lavesham Radom Quilted Jacket $305
Peregrine Porter Ribbed Scarf $68
Inspiration
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