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- Issue #97 | Todd Snyder just put the good stuff on sale
Issue #97 | Todd Snyder just put the good stuff on sale
Plus, Alex Eagle gives J Crew a British makeover and GQ crowns the quietest man at the New York Film Festival its best dressed
Welcome to Style Uncut. The latest and greatest in men’s fashion and style brought direct to your inbox every week.

Alex Eagle Brings British Ease to J.Crew
J.Crew’s newest menswear collaboration brings together British designer Alex Eagle with the brand’s classic American style. The capsule launched this week and blends Savile Row influence with the easy confidence of East Coast prep, producing a wardrobe that feels both timeless and current.
The collection includes soft-shouldered blazers in herringbone wool, relaxed pleated trousers, brushed cotton shirts, and textured knitwear with a lived-in finish. The colour palette stays understated in navy, camel, and olive with the occasional flash of red to keep things lively. Accessories and footwear are pared back with suede sneakers, simple scarves, and slim leather belts that complete the look without drawing attention.
Eagle’s London label has always favoured relaxed tailoring and natural fabrics, while J.Crew under Brendon Babenzien has pushed toward heritage updated for modern wear.
As with any J.Crew capsule, quantities are limited and popular sizes are disappearing quickly so head over to the website without delay.

Todd Snyder Cuts Prices Not Corners
Todd Snyder has quietly become the benchmark for modern American menswear, and his latest sale is a gift to anyone who appreciates quality staples at lower prices. The brand’s annual October clear-out includes more than seven hundred pieces with significant reductions across outerwear, tailoring, shirting, and footwear.
Highlights include waxed Barbour jackets, Italian-made chore coats, merino knits, and retro running sneakers from New Balance and Veja. The palette stays true to Snyder’s signature mix of utilitarian neutrals and warm autumn tones. Each piece carries that familiar balance of rugged construction and understated polish that has made the label a favourite among men who care about fit and fabric.
With discounts of up to fifty percent and limited stock in key sizes, this is the moment to fill any wardrobe gaps before winter arrives. Available now through toddsnyder.com.

The Best-Dressed Man at the New York Film Festival Is the Guy in Charge
This week in GQ, Raymond Ang profiles New York Film Festival artistic director Dennis Lim, revealing how his understated mix of Dries Van Noten, Visvim, and Lemaire quietly outshone the red-carpet regulars:
A couple of Fridays ago, on the opening night of the 63rd New York Film Festival, the stars came out in droves.
There was Julia Roberts, that superstar of superstars, tipping a hat to her iconic menswear ensembles of yore in a gray Vivenne Westwood suit and a matching tie festooned with chunky gold brooches. Beside her was Luca Guadagnino, the Italian director behind After the Hunt, the opening night film, wearing a trim gray Dior blazer paired with perfectly cut black slacks. Andrew Garfield pulled up in rakish custom Valentino, while Ayo Edebiri turned heads in a slinky Chanel dress.
Amid that sea of flashbulbs, a bespectacled, 50-something Asian man in an immaculately cut navy suit took center stage at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall—the temple of cinema that serves as the festival’s main stage—to officially open the festival and introduce Guadagnino and his cast. The suit was Dries Van Noten, the loafers were Gucci, and the man was Dennis Lim, the artistic director of the New York Film Festival.
Read the full piece over on the GQ website.

Latest pick ups
Kit Blake Grant Brown Herringbone Wool Tweed Trousers $570
Toast Organic Cord Chore Jacket $430
Brut Ripstop Pants $240
Grant Stone Ottawa Boot Black Chromexcel $435
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