Manual - MJ Bale
Transcription
Manual - MJ Bale
M E N O F S U B S TA N C E | DRESS CODES | L I F E A DV E N T U R E S N°. 4 T H E M . J. B A L E G U I D E T O S T Y L E A N D M A N LY A RT S I S S U E 4 , AU T U M N / W I N T E R 2 0 1 5 WIPP IT GOOD Radio jester duo Fitzy and Wippa’s ‘Adventures in Style’: “I’ve had some massive faux pas in my time.” Page 8 CHISELLED COUPLING “Mate, he watches Harry Potter, I know that.” Despite the banter, M.J. Bale’s campaign models, Tom and Alex, are long-time mates. Page 19 V E N T U R E C A P I TA L I S T How to have a grown man’s adventure, from exploring the mind and spirit, to matters of the heart. Page 35 T H E A DV E N T U R E S o f a W E L L - D R E S S E D G E N T L E M A N 05. 08. 19. 20. 22. 26. 27. 30. 35. 38. Letter From The Founder Men Of The Bale Model Citizens Tas-man-ia M.J. Bale Online Shirt Fit Guide What Makes A Gentleman Purchasing An M.J. Bale Custom Suit Gentlemanly Guide To Adventures The David Bonney Edit Origins Of The Suit Matt Jensen’s Autumn/Winter Edit 9-Point Plan Nailed & Failed 2 | MJBALE.COM AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 3 LETTER FROM THE FOUNDER Welcome to the fourth edition of the Manual, our quarterly compendium of life and M.J. Bale style which we’ve timed to be released in conjunction with our new Autumn/ Winter 2015 collection. You’ll see these pages peppered with what we hope are some great people, product and stories. You’ll see words like “adventures” and “gentleman” used a lot in this Manual, as we conceived this collection around the idea of the ‘Adventures of a WellDressed Gentleman.’ For this collection we wanted to create garments for our swashbuckling M.J. Bale customers on the move, be it for business trips, weekends away or quite literally moving on and up in life (work, events, marriage etc.). The way that we see it, life is a big adventure, but not necessarily a physical one. As you’ll read within these pages, an adventure, we passionately believe, is in the arc and character of your life. It’s like the Mark Twain maxim, and I paraphrase: If you thought the same way at 50 as you did aged 20, you’ve wasted 30 years. So true. We hope in this collection that we’ve created clothes that are of course functional, but also aspirational. We want you to feel good about yourself and to enjoy the confidence you experience when getting dressed up. We want you to look in the mirror of a morning and say, “I’m looking good, I’m feeling good.” Us? Well, M.J. Bale’s big adventure is still in full swing. We’ve had a phenomenal few years, but aren’t slowing down. We’ve got a lot more things to do and a lot more clothes to create, because we absolutely love doing what we do. We’re growing bigger and will be launching new M.J. Bale stores across Australia this year. We’re producing new leather accessories and more elegant casual garments, like slim-cut chinos and dapper shawl cable knits. We’re also re-launching our website to evolve the brand to service you guys, wherever you are, and to do so with speed and efficiency. Lastly, I want to thank the people involved in this campaign. We’re so lucky to work with some of Australia’s most talented creatives, including photographer Hugh Stewart, stylist David Bonney, art director David Hutton (SoDUS), grooming expert Stephen Foyle (Detail for Men) and journalist-editor Jonathan Lobban, who helped put together this issue of the Manual along with the M.J. Bale team. Thanks also to the Sydney Morning Herald’s Walkley award winning artist, John Shakespeare, for the great illustrations. 2015, here we come. Let’s all fire up. Matt Jensen, M.J. Bale Founder & CEO BLAG THE SWAG THE ORIGINS OF FOUR KEY GARMENTS TO S O U N D S M A R T ( A N D B O R E YO U R M AT E S W I T H ) The Suit The French invented the pre-cursor to the modern suit in the 1600s, creating (admittedly very effeminate) flowing coats, waistcoats, tight breeches and cravats worn at King Louis XIV’s Versailles court. However, it was the English dandy, Beau Brummell, who perfected the suit in the 1800s, creating a relatively masculine version consisting of a navy blue tailcoat, beige vest and trousers, and white cravat. The penniless Brummell eventually died in a French asylum in 1840 (and, ironically, not very well dressed either). PIANA PLAYERS This season we have delved further into the archives of our fabric suppliers to bring to you our best fabrics yet. But don’t take our word for it, as our friends at legendary Italian mill Loro Piana state: “...clothing made of Loro Piana Tasmanian fabric is perfectly suited to almost every occassion in virtually every season of the year. Already appreciated by fine clothing enthusiasts all over the world, Tasmanian has now been created using even finer wools taken from prized lots of Super 150’s Wool - all for a discernable fineness you can actually feel. The extraordinarily soft hand of this Tasmanian cloth will win over anyone who touches it.” See, we couldn’t have said it better ourselves. Tasmanian wool, milled in Italy and used in a selection of our latest M.J. Bale suits to make you feel like you’ve just stepped off the helicopter at Cradle Mountain. You can thank us later. The 5-Fold Tie We can’t for the life of us find out who created the first 5-fold tie (M.J. Bale’s new, premium ties), but we do know the modern tie traces its origins to the Croatian militia who fought for the French in the early 17th-century wearing knotted and colourful silk handkerchiefs tied around their necks. The boyish French king Louis XIV loved the bravery of the Croats, as well as their neckties, and hence the cravat (French derivative of ‘Croat’) was born. The Shirt The origins of the shirt date back to the first time man realised he was cold and naked (followed closely next by man’s early methods of wooing partners: “Babe, this shirt is really chaffing me, mind if I take it off?”). The modern shirt - a cotton number with buttons going all the way down the chest - was apparently created by English firm Brown, Davies & Co. in 1871. Until then men just pulled the shirt on (and off ) over their heads, no doubt putting their backs out on the odd occasion. The Tuxedo The tuxedo was created for the Prince of Wales (later Edward VII) in the 1860s by Savile Row tailor, Henry Poole & Co., as a rebellion of sorts against the Prince’s mother, Queen Victoria, who stuffily used to make him dress in a black formal tailcoat at every dinner. The Prince had his version made as a smoking jacket of sorts in a brilliant blue silk and without a tailcoat. A visiting New Yorker (Mr Potter) to the Prince’s Sandringham Estate saw Henry Poole to get dressed in the style of the Prince. Potter took the dinner jacket back to New York and attended a function at Tuxedo Park. Hence, the term stuck (in England it remains a ‘dinner suit’). 4 | MJBALE.COM AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 5 AUTUMN/WINTER 15 AUTUMN/WINTER 15 CAVALIER NAVY JACKET $499.00 BAYLDON NAVY SHIRT $149.95 TOULON NAVY TROUSER $179.00 VALDISERE RED POCKETCHIEF $39.95 BROWN LEATHER BELT $99.95 PENN GREY SUIT $995.00 PENN GREY DOUBLE-BREASTED WAISTCOAT $250.00 CONNALL NAVY STRIPE SHIRT $79.95 ALVARO SKY TIE $129.95 MEGEVE GREY POCKETCHIEF $29.95 ARNOUX NAVY SCARF $149.95 THYNNE DENIM SUIT $899.00 THYNNE DENIM DOUBLE-BREASTED WAISTCOAT $299.00 LENNOX SKY SHIRT $79.95 MEGEVE BLUE TIE $129.95 NAVY CHECK POCKETCHIEF $15.00 EDSON TIE CLIP $79.95 FRANKLIN NAVY COAT $699.00 BEULER NAVY CABLE SWEATER $299.00 AYRES INK TROUSER $179.00 ALONSO GREEN SCARF $149.95 6 | MJBALE.COM AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 7 FRIENDS OF M.J. BALE FRIENDS OF M.J. BALE FI T Z Y & W I PPA’ S ADVENTURES IN STYLE Radio funnymen Ryan “Fitzy” Fitzgerald and Michael “Wippa” Wipfli on their fashion sense, the laws of style and what it means to be a man. “I normally take a blazer or jacket and jeans or trousers of some sort, a pair of shorts, and sometimes a coat as well in winter. As long as I can chuck it in my bag or throw it over my shoulder it’s all good.” Wippa: (nodding furiously) Yesss… Yesss M.J. Bale: Has there ever been a time when you thought that you were killing it in the style department, but had actually blown it? Fitzy: Yeah, I’ve had some massive faux pas in my time. Um… well, I actually do always think that I’m killing it. But I’m actually a pretty basic man. It’s black jeans and band t-shirts for me. Having grown up in Sydney “near the coast”, Tobin says getting to know Australia more intimately has been a thrill. “I love getting to Tasmania,” he says. “Tassie has all that rugged wilderness. I love getting out to Western Australia. I have to say the Kimberleys are my favourite part of Australia. It’s ancient, beautiful and feels untouched, you know, it’s… fantastic.” Wippa: I had a moment at a year 12 formal where I tore my shirt on the dance floor. I called Mum from the reception centre, wherever we were, and Mum brought a new shirt up for me. It was Dad’s, so it was far too big and I was a bit sweaty. I went straight back on the dance floor and… I split my pants. There was nothing I could do about it. I wasn’t wearing undies, either. Wippa: Yeah, it is. Fitzy: Yep. I was wearing it with oversized black pants and I remember I wasn’t doing too well because the girls from the local high school used to come in, and they used to laugh at me as they went through my checkout. M.J. Bale: Fitz, were you always the tallest kid in class? FITZY (LEFT) WEARS: MONTGOMERIE BLACK TUXEDO $995.00, BLACKROCK WHITE TUXEDO SHIRT $149.95, MAURICIO BLACK BOW TIE $69.95, WHITE POCKETCHIEF $15.00 | WIPPA (RIGHT) WEARS: ENDO NAVY SUIT $1295.00, TURLEY WHITE SHIRT $149.95, MEGEVE BLUE BOW TIE $99.95, WHITE POCKETCHIEF $15.00 unemployment rate in Taiwan go down. (Looks at Wippa drinking his Scotch) Mate, you better go easy on that if you’re going to drive after this, big fella. Wippa: The next thing you know old copycat here rolls through with a glass of whiskey and a velvet bow tie trying to be Michael Wipfli. Wippa: It’s fantastic. M.J. Bale: Ok, last one: what makes a gentleman? M.J. Bale: Boys, what are your laws of style? Fitzy: What makes a gentleman? Well, etiquette is a big one, and the way you treat the opposite sex is a big one. Yeah, I think that’s what makes a gentleman to me… the way that you treat a woman. Fitzy: Yep, so I’ve grown up with ankle freezers my whole life… Wippa: Laws of style…be brave. I mean, when we’ve been to the races, Fitzy thinks he’s hilarious. You know what he used to do? He would go to the races dressed as Austin Powers. Wippa: Always, always short pants… Fitzy: Oh no I didn’t! Fitzy: … Always short pants and short arms in shirts. Wippa: Every year! M.J. Bale: Do you remember your first suit purchase? Fitzy: No, that’s the biggest faux pas. That is the one thing that I hate. Or, a coloured suit from Bali. Fitzy: I don’t reckon… God, I remember the first suit that I got was for my formal, and that was from “Ferrari formalwear”, which was horrible! And I had a cummerbund. M.J. Bale: Yes! What colour was the cummerbund? Fitzy: It was purple. I remember because it went with my purple vest. Wippa: Noooooo! I need to jump in here, and remember we’ve heard this story a million times before… at the formal where I split my shirt I turned up with the novelty bow tie on. It was the water pistol. Yeah… very funny for about a second. M.J. Bale: Ok Wippa, finish this sentence: ‘Clothes maketh the…” Wippa: (Thinks hard) Um… the… man we’re attempting to be? The man we idolise? Um, because, you know, when you do adopt a style for what you’re going for you do try, I suppose, to emulate someone, don’t you? I mean, right now I’m doing my best George Clooney. But if you go around in that band t-shirt, you’re kind of trying to be in that scene, aren’t you, mate? Fitzy: Yep. Wippa: You’re desperate to be accepted into that scene, aren’t you? Fitzy: Right. Right. Exactly. Um, clothes maketh the… 8 | MJBALE.COM TELEVISION PRESENTER James Tobin is used to travelling lightly, and often. As a reporter and weather presenter for Channel 7 and the weather presenter for Weekend Sunrise Tobin spends almost every weekend corresponding from a different locale in Australia. “It’s a case of no fuss; it’s got to be easy,” he says of his clothing requirements on the road. M.J. Bale: Ok, so let’s talk about style, in particular, your adventures in style. We’ve all made sartorial stuff-ups in the past being too adventurous… Fitzy: I was a checkout chick at Franklins No Frills and my fashion sense was no frills as well, because I was wearing an oversized white shirt… with a skinny black tie, which is actually back in fashion. JA M ES TO BI N Michael Dorman may play a a womaniser in a TV drama, but off stage the only risks the Kiwi-born actor says he takes are to do with his career. “I try to stay true to myself,” he says. Wippa: I think it’s more the way you inspire a woman, which I do from being an alpha male. I mean, I have a truck where I put meat and beer in the back and drive home. Because a woman wants a gentleman to open the car door and all those things, but to be a man, too. Sometimes I just leave the house with a chainsaw and go chop down a tree because I’m a man. “You gotta try everything at least once and push yourself as far as you can. I hope that I’ve done that and been honest with myself. I think that’s a biggie for all of us. At the end of the day, what’s important to me is that I’ve pushed it as far as I can and given everything my best shot, and not kind of cowered away.” M.J. Bale: You’re fire, he’s ice. Fitzy: Yes. Wippa: I’ve actually got a 4.2 metre Quintrex tinny. You know what annoys me, though? It’s probably the only time I’ve ever had a fashion battle. I started the bow tie. Fitzy: No you didn’t. Wippa: Out of the two of us I was the first one to wear it. We start turning up to events… what do you know? It was a velvet bow tie… that was my thing. Fitzy: No it was not your thing. You don’t own the velvet bow tie. BARNETT LIGHT BLUE JACKET $499.00 BARNETT LIGHT BLUE TROUSER $179.00 ETHEREAL WHITE SHIRT $99.95 DIMARO NAVY KNITTED TIE $129.95 WHITE POCKETCHIEF $15.00 ACTOR Fitzy: Be individual, though. Wippa and I… our fashion sense is totally different. He likes to dress nice. I like to dress very casual. Fitzy: On his vision board at work Wippa has a vision board with a picture of an 80-foot yacht. Unfortunately he’s dressing like he owns the yacht, but he doesn’t have it. Describing his style as “pretty casual”, Tobin nonetheless likes the concept of getting dressed up. “This M.J. Bale suit is maybe not your Monday to Friday suit, but I kind of like the idea of having a loud suit with a classic shirt and tie, or a conservative suit with a pretty wild shirt. Maybe on their own, the suit or shirt would be too much, but when worn with something classic, they become a bit of a statement.” MI CHAEL D O R MAN Wippa: I mean, I wore a jumper last year, didn’t I? It’s just a photo printed on a jumper, and it’s chips. Fries. Novelty items like that I think are fantastic. Wippa: Yeah. I’m so chilled I can burn. Effectively I can do fire as well. The result is the same but I’ve got twice the power. Asked what his favourite recent adventure across Australia was, the 34-year-old nominates a night in the Victorian high country sleeping in swags by the campfire with Geoff Burrows, the gentleman who produced and directed The Man from Snowy River. “He’s just one of those few people in life you meet that has a photographic memory,” Tobin says. “And he’s passionate about Victorian high country. That was a pretty incredible experience to talk to one of the real authorities on the area in the setting, you know, having a cup of tea in a billycan by the fire. He’s a man who knows so much about the country there. He researched it and loved it so much that he dedicated years of his life to produce a film about it. It was a very special experience.” COMINO BLACK TUXEDO $995.00 BLACKROCK WHITE TUXEDO SHIRT $149.95 MAURICIO BLACK BOW TIE $69.95 WHITE POCKETCHIEF $15.00 Having studied acting in Queensland as a 17-year-old Dorman made his name on The Secret Life of Us, before spending a near decade working in film. He returned to television to stay in Australia, but is keeping an open mind as to whether he’ll head to the US to try and break through into Hollywood. “We’ll see”, he says. “You can go over and knock on doors. I’ve been invited a few times to go have a look. I’m open.” Still only 34 years of age, Dorman has time on his side. When put to him as to whether he prefers the gaining of age and wisdom of his thirties or the youth of his twenties, the actor nominates the latter. “There is such a carefree nature when you’re young. You’re bulletproof. It’s almost like seeing adventures for the first time, you’re exploring to the nth degree. I remember when I was young waking up in London. I was in Australia one night and then I woke up in a London bar.” Dorman describes his personal style as “whatever’s on top”, as in whatever is clean and on top of his drawers when he gets out of the shower. So how does he like wearing his M.J. Bale tuxedo? “It’s confronting,” he says of the dapper suit. “It’s definitely outside of my comfort zone. But in saying that, I’m quite enjoying putting on something new, something I wouldn’t normally wear. I used to go to events and things and I could never put on a suit. Even if it was black tie I would be the one in jeans and a shirt. That was my comfort zone. But now I feel comfortable in this suit. I like it! I could definitely get used to it.” “I had a moment at a year 12 formal where I tore my shirt on the dance floor… Mum brought a new one for me… I went straight back on the dance floor and split my pants. I wasn’t wearing undies, either.” - Wippa AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 9 LOOKBOOK LOOKBOOK KENTIA STEEL JACKET $499.00 MAYNARD NAVY SHIRT $149.00 LINWOOD NAVY CHINOS $179.00 MEGEVE GREY POCKETCHIEF $29.95 THYNNE DENIM SUIT $899.00 THYNNE DENIM DOUBLE-BREASTED WAISTCOAT $299.00 LENNOX SKY SHIRT $79.95 MEGEVE BLUE TIE $129.95 NAVY CHECK POCKETCHIEF $15.00 10 | MJBALE.COM GLASGOW BLUE JACKET $499.00 OWENS WHITE SHIRT $79.95 MALUCA NAVY TROUSER $200.00 MAURICIO NAVY BOW TIE $69.95 WHITE POCKETCHIEF $15.00 ALVAREZ NAVY SWEATSHIRT $129.95 AYRES SAND TROUSERS $179.00 CUSTOM M.J. BALE SUIT prices starting at $995.00 MISCHRA NAVY/WHITE SHIRT $99.95 LEROY AQUA TIE $99.95 MADOX TIE CLIP $79.95 MEGEVE SKY POCKETCHIEF $29.95 FARRELL RED SHIRT $129.95, AYRES SAND TROUSER $179.00, COROWA RED/BLUE BELT $89.95 CHIKARA BLUE SUIT $1295.00 EOIN BLUE SHIRT $79.95 RODDICK DENIM SWEATER $169.00 MAURICIO LIGHT GREY TIE $79.95 MEGEVE GREY POCKETCHIEF $29.95 NEWCOMBE OLIVE SWEATER $169.00 BLIGHT TAUPE SHIRT $129.95 LINWOOD OLIVE CHINOS $179.00 PARKES CHOCOLATE SUEDE BELT $89.95 M.J. BALE CUSTOM JACKET from $699.00 DEVANEY NAVY/RED SHIRT $149.95 LINWOOD NAVY CHINOS $179.00 MEGEVE GREY POCKETCHIEF $29.95 BROWN LEATHER BELT $99.95 SPENCER BLUE JACKET $499.00 AYRES INK TROUSER $179.00 VISBY DENIM SWEATER $199.00 DELAFIELD NAVY SHIRT $99.95 PIRONI GREY/BLUE SCARF $149.95 FRANKLIN NAVY COAT $699.00 VILAS SHAWL COLLAR CABLE SWEATER $299.00 CABRIS BLUE TROUSER $179.00 MONTGOMERIE BLACK TUXEDO $995.00 BLACKROCK TUXEDO SHIRT $149.95 BLACK MAURICIO BOW TIE $69.95 BLACK COTTON SOCKS $19.95 WHITE POCKETCHIEF $15.00 AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 11 FRIENDS OF M.J. BALE FRIENDS OF M.J. BALE MEN ALEX RU SSELL OF THE BALE WH AT MA K ES A GENT L EMAN “A gentleman is intelligent and well balanced. He has sound values and good manners. He is respectful to others but also commands respect through his deeds. He has a great spirit and energy — a kind of worldly inquisitiveness that keeps him exploring.” ACTOR PH I L WAU G H E X-WA LLA BY & WA RATAH (RUGBY UNION) Matt Jensen, M.J. Bale Founder & CEO A self-confessed “old soul”, 27-year-old Alex Russell likes his style on the timeless side of classic. The Rockhampton born-and-raised actor recently also turned back the clock on the big screen to star as the older brother of Olympic athlete Louis Zamperini in Angelina Jolie’s World War Two biopic, Unbroken. It wasn’t Russell’s first major international lead– the 2012 US-made darkish sci-fi flick Chronicle is considered his breakout role – but Unbroken certainly did his ambitions no harm. One of the toughest and most hard-nosed flankers to ever play rugby for Australia, former Wallaby and Waratah Phil Waugh says that “the harder it got on the field, the more I enjoyed it.” Waugh, 35, credits his game-day abrasiveness to an upbringing where he was the youngest kid on his street and had to duke it out with not only the neighbourhood “ratbags”, but also his older brother. “When you’re playing around with older kids you’ve got to be pretty resilient,” he says. “I think that’s what it was. I don’t know. People have said that I had a complete disregard for my body (when playing rugby), and I have had plenty of cuts and stitches and scars along the way, but it’s all just part of the journey.” Waugh’s journey included 79 tests for the Wallabies and 124 Super Rugby caps for the NSW Waratahs, most of which he earned as skipper of the side. Professional rugby was his passport to seeing the world as a young man and he says touring South Africa remains one of the highlights. “I always loved South Africa,” he says. “South Africa is a great country, particularly places like Cape Town and the areas around Table Mountain, out to Stellenbosch and those sorts of places.” As for the arenas he played in, Waugh looks fondly back on Twickenham in London, Stade Francais in Paris, Lansdowne Road or Croke Park in Dublin and Murrayfield in Edinburgh. However, he admits, “if you talk about ruggedness and toughness, playing at Newlands Stadium in Cape Town or Loftus Versfeld on the Highveld… it was intimidating. But, again, the harder it got and the bigger the occasion, the more enjoyable it was.” Best travel companion? (Wallaby prop) “Benn Robinson. He’s good fun, knows his restaurants and loves a good feed. He’s very relaxed, too, but when it’s game time he’s on and gets up for it.” SAUNDERS NAVY JACKET $399.00 ROBSON MARINE SHIRT $99.95 SAUNDERS NAVY TROUSER $200.00 NAVY/PINK DOT TIE $99.95 WHITE POCKETCHIEF $15.00 ST EPHEN FERRIS DJ & VIVID MUSIC CURATO R Part of Russell’s confidence comes from the success of Rockpool Films, a film collective the actor put together with his great mate and former NIDA graduate, James Elliot, after the duo made a gentlemen’s agreement in their third year at NIDA to do projects together. “James and I went to drama school together,” Russell explains, “… Even from the very beginning, from the first year, we always worked together. We’ve always lifted each other up when the other was down and it was the kind of creative partnership that was impossible not to clock and then turn into something more official that could have more weight, more clout in the industry.” Elliot, Russell says, brings out the best in him, “I feel we are very well matched. I think my strengths are his weaknesses and his are my weaknesses.” “Besides the usual things, like being polite to people and helping others out in life, it’s also important to be focused and determined. Instead of going out and spending your weekends sinking beers and partying and all those kind of things, I think a gentleman should also be focused and have things he wants to achieve, and do it in a nice, polite way. I think being graceful in everything you do is also important. You don’t want to have the wrong mind-set and think you deserve everything that comes your way. Being a gentleman is being humble.” Tom Bull, Campaign Model LEDGER NAVY JACKET $599.00 THAIGO AQUA SHIRT $99.95 LEROY AQUA TIE $99.95 NAVY CHECK POCKETCHIEF $15.00 DA IM ON DOWNEY EN TREPREN EUR/A RTIST/BA R OWN ER Screen Australia has now officially backed the pair to do Sons of Salt, a crime tale about an ex-con trying to rebuild his life while trying not to get dragged into the past by his surfer brother. Van Diemen’s Land director Jonathan Auf der Heide is attached to the film and filming is slated to start this year. “It’s about having good manners and being a good guy and treating people well. It’s as simple as that. A gentleman is someone that when they speak to you, they seem engaged and interested, then the next time you see them they remember the conversation. They’re the guys who stamp themselves in your memory and make you walk away feeling good about them and yourself.” James Tobin, Television Presenter “It’s about having integrity and being genuine.” Daimon Downey might be better known as the charismatic former front man of Sneaky Sound System and the co-owner of piccolo Sydney Italian restaurant The Lemon Tree, as well as hip nightspots like Pelicano and Bondy’s, but it’s the art world where deserves kudos. Downey’s incandescent aquarelle paintings are, in the words of the artist, “beautiful colours doing dangerous things… like dropping a Buffalo Bill on a hot footpath.” He has partied with Prince Albert of Monaco and supported Fatboy Slim, Norman Jay, INXS, Grace Jones, the Scissor Sisters and Frankie Knuckles on tour. He has played privately for Bill Gates and spun the decks at James Packer’s wedding. DJ Stephen Ferris, the older brother of John Ferris and Pee Wee Ferris (dubbed “Cosa Nostra” by Norman Jay), is the closest we have to the grand old man in Australian dance music. Not that he’d appreciate that term. Whether it’s disco, pop, funk, jazz or soul, Ferris has his fingers on the pulse of anything with a beat or melody. Originally from the picturesque town of Bellingen in Northern NSW, Downey credits his “artistic quirks” to his mother and father, who he says always “celebrated” his eccentricities, rather than squashing them. “Given the chance I would have scribbled on the walls of my mother’s womb,” he quips. Recently the country boy made good has turned his eye to ceramics, creating edgy and abstract pieces that are to the pottery world what a pink velvet tuxedo suit is to menswear. Ferris started his career in San Francisco in the late 70’s, before moving back to Sydney to play nights at the infamous Watermelon Club and The Berlin Club at Jamieson Street (1500 people on a Tuesday night!). He also fronted big-at-the-time pop/funk band Flotsam Jetsam during the mid80s, Speaking of suits, the always impeccably dressed Mr. Downey does an effortless turn for us here in his heavy flannel M.J. Bale Ledger double-breasted jacket. How would he describe his style? “I usually get my compliments from totally crazy wackos who in a loud camp voice scream “Ohhh, wow, I loooove your style,” he says. “Not sure what that says about me but I think I’m pretty low key.” A music radio presenter, Sydney-based Ferris has hosted intermittent slots on Triple J since the late 1980s, as well as Melbourne’s Kiss FM, ABC 702 & Rhythm FM. But it’s FBi radio, his regular gig since 2003, which we love him best for. As a supporter of the popular community radio station since it’s very inception, he is a man of the people. INVERELL NAVY JACKET $399.00, INVERELL NAVY TROUSER $200.00 QUENTIN GREY SHIRT $99.95 MEGEVE BLUE POCKETCHIEF $29.95 PARKES CHOCOLATE BELT $89.95 12 | MJBALE.COM Ferris’ latest gigs as a music curator for Vivid Sydney (Manager of Events in Music to be precise) as well as curating the music in-stores for M.J. Bale this season, ensure that he’ll be pushing his unique blend of soul and funk to the masses for a few years to come. Daimon Downey? Low key? Never. At least, we hope not. To paraphrase the British poet, Edith Sitwell, the hirsute ceramicist Downey is not eccentric; it’s just that he’s more alive than most people… an electric eel in a pond of catfish. LEDGER CHARCOAL JACKET $599.00 BANNING BROWN SHIRT $99.95 VALDISERE RED POCKETCHIEF $29.95 Phil Waugh, Ex-Wallaby and Waratah “The number one sign of a gentleman, when compared to the ordinary man, is respect for women - no questions. Open the door for them, don’t swear in front of them, put them on a pedestal etc. In terms of dress, a gentleman has respect for the occasion for which he is dressing. Dress for, and up to, the occasion but not over it. A gentleman does not make others feel guilty or not worthy by being over-dressed, either. A gentleman can also be trusted above all other men. He is a man of his word, a man of integrity.” Drew Hoare, M.J. Bale Brand Manager “I don’t know exactly what makes a gentleman, but I guess if I were to imagine raising my son I’d want him to be generous, strong, loving and astute.” Michael Dorman, Actor AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 13 FRIENDS OF M.J. BALE FRIENDS OF M.J. BALE KRIS JONES MEN QT MASTER BA RBER OF THE BALE DANIEL FITCH M.J. BALE DESIGNER It may seem like a misnomer for M.J. Bale designer, Daniel Fitch, to say that he likes to “honour tradition while eliminating convention”, but the man does walk the walk. The Northern Beaches-raised creative can be seen most days here in the office wearing a crisp white M.J. Bale shirt and slim-cut navy M.J. Bale suit over artfully tattooed arms. It’s a reminder to us at HQ that classicism and individuality need not be strange bedfellows. With regards to his own work as part of the team designing our collections, Fitch says, “It’s all about creating longevity, combining timeless style, clever simplicity and quality... Style to me is a bold statement of self expression... Every individual can wear one outfit entirely contradictory to another, which is the beauty of diversity by interpretation. I like to think that humanity depends upon a diversity of talent and observation, not a singular conception of ability and opinion. This is the basis of my creativity, and design is my passion.” HUGO NAVY WAISTCOAT $179.00 ETHEREAL WHITE SHIRT $99.95 LINWOOD BROWN CHINOS $179.00 Before he joined M.J. Bale Fitch admits he was a fan from afar. “My heart was drawn to M.J. Bale as a brand that I could identify with and wear with a subtle confidence. Now, deep in the trenches with this extraordinary label, our sights are set on building M.J. Bale as the ultimate men’s outfitter.” QT Sydney’s head barber, Kris Jones, has been passionate about hair and men’s grooming ever since he first started cutting hair 15 years ago in a small shop in Wales. He’s been teaching the grooming arts for at least 10 years and arrived in Australia via a long stint in London. “I just love making people happy,” he remarks. “I love making people’s day. I come in and give them a bit of whisky, a little haircut. I can change their mood for the day and it’s nice. Not only that, but grooming is important because it’s imperative to look good and stand out from everybody else.” Jones says M.J. Bale similarly makes him happy. “Look at my shirt, man! How could you be in a bad mood in a shirt like this? It starts your day on a positive note if you look sharp.” Speaking of sharp, check out Kris’ short, sharp daily grooming regime for us blokes below. SK I N F L I C K Don’t kiss off the kisser; put some time into your face via a simple daily grooming regime. Kris, Head Barber from QT Sydney, tells us how: fig. 1 Start by getting the basics right: good moisturiser, good razor and shaving products – not a foam – and good hair product. fig. 2 fig. 3 In the morning have a shower and cleanse face, then shave in the mirror (always shave after a shower) and put some moisturiser on. It should take no more than 5 minutes. At the end of the day use a facial scrub in the shower. That’s it, mate. Go forth and be handsome. MALUCA NAVY JACKET $399.00 MALUCA NAVY TROUSER $200.00 DAWES NAVY/RED SHIRT $99.95 ANGELIS NAVY TIE $149.95 ELLIS TIPE CLIP $79.95 MORITZ SKY POCKETCHIEF $29.95 NA ILED & FA ILED T I M GI L B E RT TH REE ( A DMITTEDLY FL AWED) L EG EN DS WH O N A IL ED IT, A N D O N E TH AT DIDN ’ T SP ORTS R E P ORTE R /PRESENT ER M E N W H O NA I L E D I T 1 If you’re ever daydreaming at work thinking about how good it would be to make a career out of doing something you love, reference Tim Gilbert as the guy who has successfully done exactly that. The Sydney-born family man (‘Gilbo’ has three children under the age of 7 with former Coogee surf boat rower wife, Josie) has forged a 25year career as a sportscaster, first in radio then 19 years (and counting) with Channel Nine. Gilbert has covered a host of the world’s top sporting events, including the 2012 London Olympics and 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics, as well as most major international cricket, golf and cycling tournaments. 2 3 When it comes to his own sporting pursuits, Gilbert loves golf, stand up paddle boarding and rugby league (he played for years at high school). He takes his golf clubs everywhere he travels; when we recently spoke to him on the phone Gilbert was in Adelaide hosting the Santos Tour Down Under and had just finished 18 holes at The Grange. When it comes to style, Gilbert is typically self-deprecating. “You know me, I don’t really have a style,” he admits. “I guess I’m a pretty plain type of guy, but hopefully classic and masculine in the way that I dress.” In terms of his career, 2015 will be anything but plain for the veteran sports presenter. Gilbert has taken over the sports reporting on Channel Nine’s Today show, a fitting reward for a bloke described by his colleagues as one of the good guys, a man not keen on blowing his own trumpet or stepping over others in the mad scramble to climb the career ladder. Nine reporter Wendy Kingston recently described Gilbert as “one of the nicest guys on TV”, proving that nice guys, it seems, can finish first. 14 | MJBALE.COM Julius Caesar The Roman general and statesman/dictator was as divisive as they come in Ancient Rome, but he was revered by his soldiers, with whom he would fight with on the front line shoulder-to-shoulder, rather than barking orders from the back. We love the story told by Roman biographers Suetonius and Plutarch of how a then 25-year-old civilian Caesar was captured by Sicilian pirates off the island of Pharmacussa. Having sent his men back to Rome to raise the ransom, Caesar calmly swore to his captors that he would return to “capture and crucify” them. After being let go by the pirates on the receipt of ransom, Caesar put together a militia of men and returned, capturing the men and all their possessions, as well as taking back his ransom. Sure, he was murdered by his senatorial peers aged in his 50s, but hands up those of us who have a month named in their honour? Michelangelo Although the Italian artist saw himself as a sculptor, not painter, it is for Michelangelo’s epic brushwork on nine panels of the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican for which he is best remembered. The ceiling took four years to paint, in which time Michelangelo also skived off work to build a separate 23 x 32 stone tomb for the Pope. Hot-tempered and on the revengeful side of vitriolic, when a papal official attempted to view his painting The Last Judgement before it was finished, Michelangelo painted the official into the artwork as one of hell’s damned, depicting the official as being tormented in perpetuity by devils. Ouch. Ernest Hemingway American writer Hemingway served as a Red Cross ambulance driver in World War 1 and was a war correspondent during the Spanish Civil War and World War Two. He wrote the seminal books The Sun Also Rises, A Farewell to Arms, Death in the Afternoon, For Whom the Bell Tolls and A Moveable Feast. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1953 for The Old Man and the Sea and the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954. The ‘lover, writer and fighter’ was six-feet tall and, according to Irish writer, James Joyce, “a big, powerful peasant, as strong as a buffalo.” Suffering from bipolar mood disorder, depression, alcoholism and intermittent bouts of psychosis, he unfortunately took his own life in 1961, a sad conclusion for a life lived to the full. H E W H O NA I L E D, T H E N FA I L E D MAITLAND DENIM JACKET $399.00 OWENS BLUE SHIRT $79.95 DUBOIS NAVY TIE $99.95 MEGEVE BLUE POCKETCHIEF $29.95 ELLIS TIE CLIP $79.95 1 Francis Bacon Speculation has it that English philosopher, poet and statesman Francis Bacon may have been the real author of William Shakespeare’s plays. He is, however, more widely acknowledged as one of the founders of modern scientific method. His book, The Arrangement and General Survey of Knowledge, was banned by the Vatican in the late 1600s. But in a huge and epic fail, Bacon met his death at the hands of a frozen chicken in 1626. As history recorded it, Bacon was riding in his carriage one day when he had the idea to preserve food by stuffing it with snow. He sourced a chicken and stuffed the bird with snow, then devoured it. This act of early refrigeration, though innovative (kind of ), gave him a cold that morphed quickly into bronchitis and Bacon died just a few days later. AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 15 DETAILS DETAILS BUXTON NAVY JACKET $599.00 BUXTON NAVY TROUSER $299.00 DAWES RASPBERRY SHIRT $99.95 JACQUES NAVY 5 FOLD TIE $159.95 GREY CHECK POCKETCHIEF $15.00 MONTROSE TAUPE JACKET $599.00 16 | MJBALE.COM VANDERBILT TOBACCO COAT $499.00 BEULER GREY CABLE SWEATER $299.00 BENTINCK BROWN SUIT $899.00 NEWCOMBE ROSEWOOD SWEATER $169.00 MEGEVE OLIVE POCKETCHIEF $29.95 BAYLDON NAVY SHIRT $149.95 AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 17 MODULAR MATESHIP FRONT MEN M OD EL CITIZ ENS “I hear words like “beauty” and “handsomeness” and “incredibly chiseled features” and for me that’s like a vanity of self absorption that I try to steer clear of.” — Hansel, Zoolander Even though models, Englishman, Alex Libby (the one with shaggy hair), and Perth boy, Tom Bull, have been great mates for years, this M.J. Bale Autumn/Winter 2015 campaign shoot was their first ever job together. After returning from Tassie we sat the pair down to gauge their (admittedly high) level of mateship. M.J. Bale: Ok you two. How did you meet? Tom: We had a mutual friend in London, one of my best friends, and she met ‘Libs’ on a train in Milan and called me straight after to say we had to meet up. I didn’t like the guy at first, but I’m slowly coming around. Alex: Slim pickings here in Australia, hey? Tom: We had a day or two in London hanging out and whatever and then I contacted him for his London’s agent’s details, and he said, ‘Mate, it’s blah blah blah, just landing in Milan, catch up later.’ I said, ‘Mate, I’m landing in Milan as well’, so we hired a car and just drove around Italy for a week. Alex: It was a Fiat Panda. That car was phenomenal. Tom: Yeah, that’s right. Libs said, ‘Oh, mate. Because I put my credit card down for the rental, do you reckon I could drive?’ No worries. He gets behind the wheel and I say, ‘you’re going the wrong way, chuck a U-turn’. He does the U-turn and goes straight into a motorbike. Then he loses all the rental documents. Shocker. Alex: Blame it on Libs! M.J. Bale: How would you describe each other’s personalities? Alex: In all fairness, I’d call Tommy a new era gentleman. Yeah, he’s definitely a gentleman. He’ll open the door for you, but on the way through he’ll kick you in the arse. left to right: ALEX WEARS: DAWKINS INDIGO DOUBLE-BREASTED JACKET $499.00 LINWOOD NAVY CHINO $179.00 LYNCH NAVY SHIRT $99.95 NEWCOMBE BLUE SWEATER $169.95 GREY KNITTED TIE $99.95 TOM WEARS: FRANKLIN NAVY COAT $699.00 BEULER NAVY CABLE SWEATER AYRES INK TROUSER $179.00 ALONSO GREEN SCARF $149.95 18 | MJBALE.COM Tom: Alex gives a lot. He cares about other people. He tries to make everybody feel comfortable, which is a nice thing to be. He’s a great person to be with. I can walk into a party with him and just feed him to the sharks. Everybody loves him. Everybody gets along with him really well. His outlook on life is phenomenal. He just wants to make the most out of every opportunity and experience the most he can. Actually, nobody knows this, but Alex is a carpenter by trade. It’s even funny now… he’s modelling and absolutely killing it and every now and then he’s like, “I just want to go back to Devon and be a lifeguard or build things’. He went home recently and spent his time building a roof for his buddy. Then he was in the Philippines he helped a random family put a hut together so they had shelter. He’s a big giver. M.J. Bale: Alex, you like the tools, huh? Alex: I used to build big wooden gates and staircases. I used to love building gates. I can build a sexy gate. I used to chat up the girls by getting out the iPhone and saying, ‘I made that gate.’ M.J. Bale: Tom, does Alex read? Tom: Mate, he watches Harry Potter, I know that. He reads his Instagram comments. Alex: God, I don’t even know if Tom can read. He likes his music, but not cool kind of music. He listens to whatever Smooth FM play; the smoother the better. God, that man is sleazy with the girls, too. He’s got some hell chat on him. Sometimes I can’t hold it together some of the stuff he says. It makes me cringe. He definitely has the silver tongue. M.J. Bale: Alex, is Tom the type of guy you see being great mates with in 10-20 years? Alex: Yep, definitely. Easily. Possible best man. Friend for life. Top bloke. For all the ‘dickheadism’, he’s actually a great guy inside. Just a super good guy. Top, top bloke. Would do anything for anyone. He’s helped me out more than he knows. I don’t know. I just want to reciprocate it, I guess. A lot of people could live life the way Tommy does. Tom: Aw, isn’t that nice? As long as the ticker’s still clicking over we’ll still be having a laugh together. That’s for sure. AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 19 MATT JENSEN’S AUTUMN/WINTER SELECTS MATT JENSEN’S AUTUMN/WINTER SELECTS 3. 17. 16. 2. 1. 18. 4. 15. 5. 19. 7. 6. 8. 20. 21. 9. 10. 12. 11. 24. 23. 22. 13. 14. 25. 1. Prost Navy Scarf $149.95, 2. Parkes Red Suede Belt $89.95, 3. Beuler Grey Cable Knit $299.00, 4. Newcombe Marine Knit $169.00, 5. Cevert Red Knit Tie $129.95, 6. Parkes Navy Suede Belt $89.95, 7. Vilas Shawl Collar Cable Knit $299.00, 8. Rupert Raspberry Shirt $99.95, 9. Hamilton Green Knit Tie $129.95, 10. Penhaligons Bayolea EDT 100ml $174.00, 11. Alvere Green Card Holder $89.00, 12. Linwood Stone Chino $179.00, 13. Bayard Tan Note Book Cover $89.00 & Camille Bark Wallet $149.00, 20 | MJBALE.COM 14. Rosberg Grey Scarf $149.95, 15. Blight Indigo Shirt $129.95, 16. Wallard Beige/Navy Knit Tie $129.95, 17. Newcombe Rosewood Knit $169.00, 18. Antoine Navy Coin Holder $89.00, 19. Penhaligons Sartorial EDT 100ml $189.00, 20. Alonso Green Scarf $149.95, 21. Frentzen Navy Knit Tie $129.95, 22. Corbin Red Key Holder $169.00, 23. Attenborough Navy Coat $699.00, 24. Torquil Navy/Red $149.95, 25. Madox Tie Clip $79.95, Ellis Tie Clip $79.95, Edson Tie Clip $79.95 AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 21 ISLE OF MAN ISLE OF MAN TAS-M A N -IA N Why did we shoot our AW 15 campaign in Tasmania? Well, besides its rugged wilderness, our nation’s smallest (but arguably most pristine) state is full of fascinating people, places, history and heritage. Here is the edit. HOW D O YO U LIKE T HESE A PPL E S? FOR M IDABLE FEATS BY TASMANIANS • Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein: Considered one of the most influential war generals of all time, “Monty”, as he was known, commanded the British Eighth Army in Africa during the Second World War, winning the 2nd Battle of the Alamein, amongst countless other campaigns. The ‘Montgomery’ martini – mixed at a ratio of 15 parts gin to 1 part Vermouth – is named after the General because of his penchant for preferring a 15:1 numerical advantage in battle. Montgomery was British born but lived in Hobart from 1889 to 1901, thus considered more than 10% Tasmanian. • Crown Princess Mary of Denmark – Born, raised and schooled in Hobart, Mary Donaldson was working as a real estate agent in Sydney in 2000 when she met Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark at the local boozer. Having tied the knot with the Prince in 2004 and given birth to two Danish Princes and two Princesses, Mary is now officially referred to as ‘Her Royal Highness The Crown Princess of Denmark, Countess of Monpezat’. • David Clarence Boon: Legend has it that Launceston-born Boony, the stocky, moustachioed Australian cricket icon of the ‘80s, once sank 52 cans of beer on a flight from Sydney to London, in the process creating the world’s ugliest hangover. M .J. BA LE’S 9 - POINT PLA N FACTO IDS PL AC ES TO G O / PEO PL E TO K N OW • Tasmania’s population is a click over half a million, with 513,400 Tasmanians and counting • At a total of 68,000 square kilometres, the state is roughly the same size of Ireland. It traverses 315 kms west to east and 286 kms north to south. • With a latitude of 42 degrees, Tasmania shares the same latitude as Tuscany and Spain. It has a maritime climate with regular rainfall and winds delivered from the Great Southern Ocean’s Roaring Forties • An epicurean paradise, Tasmania is famous for its fresh organic produce, including salmon, oysters, lobster, abalone, scallops, cheese, beef, wine and artisanal beer • While not one of Australia’s biggest wine regions in terms of volume, making up just half a percent of our national output, Tasmanian wines make up for it in terms of quality. Almost all the 230 vineyards are boutique-oriented, with Pinot Noir, Riesling and Chardonnay the three top varietals. • Tasmania is the world’s largest producer of opium alkaloids, used by pharmaceutical companies to make morphine and medical opiates Islington Hotel, Davey Street, Hobart Stillwater, Bridge Road, Launceston Hobart Islington Hotel is considered the best luxury hotel in Tasmania and has awards dripping from every Scandinavian-inspired timber pore. Perfect for a weekend getaway with your partner. Located in a disused flourmill, Stillwater restaurant in ‘Lonnie’ (local speak for Launceston) has views over the Tamar River and one of the best wine lists in Tasmania. Take your date and opt for the degustation menu, or go hard at the Flinders Island salt-grass lamb. You won’t regret it. Errol Flynn, the Hollywood actor and self-proclaimed master swordsman, was born here in Hobart in 1909, inaugurating the term ‘In like Flynn’. Garagistes, Murray Street, Hobart Wine Trail Launceston Arguably one of the top restaurants in Tasmania, Garagistes puts local produce on a pedestal, then spins it round and round until you don’t know whether you’re in Copenhagen or Tokyo. Try the roasted suckling pig with pickled vegetables or the basil and laksa leaf ice-cream and shortbread. Head to Hobart and explore the Coal River and Derwent Valley regions. If not too hungover the following day, drive up Tasmania’s East Coast to Freycinet, then traverse the mountains either side of the Tamar River around Launceston to hit the local wineries. David Boon was born here in Launceston in 1960. He plundered almost 7500 runs from his 107 tests for Australia at an average of 43.65, although arguably his most famous feat was executed on a Qantas flight to London (see opposite page). MONA, Main Road, Berriedale Opened in 2011 by Tasmanian mathematician David Walsh, the awesome MONA (Museum of Old and New Art) on Hobart’s Derwent River houses, is in the words of Condè Nast Traveller, “one of the most confronting and controversial collections of art in the world.” Mowbray Cricket Club, North Launceston This is the club former Australian test cricket captain and one of Tasmania’s favourite sons, Ricky Ponting, played for as a pre-teen. ‘’As a kid, I spent hours sitting in the corner of the change rooms watching, listening and learning from Mowbray players,” he told the Sydney Morning Herald in 2013. Go the mighty Eagles! Cradle Mountain, Lake St Clair National Park With its ancient rainforests and glacial lakes, Cradle Mountain is one of the most pristine and cinematic wilderness spots in Tasmania. It was also the location for the M.J. Bale Autumn / Winter 2015 campaign shoot and, if truth be known, one of the coldest series of December days and nights we’ve ever experienced in Australia (beautiful spot, though). 1 22 | MJBALE.COM AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 23 AUTUMN/WINTER 15 AUTUMN/WINTER 15 ATTENBOROUGH CHARCOAL COAT $699.00 CARBREY NAVY SHIRT $99.95 TOULON NAVY TROUSER $179.00 GARCIANA NAVY TIE $99.95 HONSHU NAVY SUIT $1295.00 DEVANEY BLOWN/GREEN SHIRT $99.95 MEGEVE BROWN TIE $129.95 MEGEVE BLUE POCKETCHIEF $29.95 THYNNE DENIM SUIT $899.00 THYNNE DENIM DOUBLE-BREASTED WAISTCOAT $299.00 LENNOX SKY SHIRT $79.95 MEGEVE BLUE TIE $129.95 NAVY CHECK POCKETCHIEF $15.00 EDSON TIE CLIP $79.95 24 | MJBALE.COM VILAS SHAWL COLLAR CABLE SWEATER $299.00 ANDERSON NAVY SHIRT $149.95 LINWOOD MID GREY CHINO $179.00 CEVERT NAVY TIE $149.95 PARKES CHOCOLATE SUEDE BELT $89.95 VANDERBILT TOBACCO COAT $499.00 BEULER GREY CABLE SWEATER $299.00 BLIGHT TAUPE SHIRT $129.95 LINWOOD BROWN CHINO $179.00 ALBORETO BLUE SCARF $149.95 BEULER GREY CABLE SWEATER $299.00 BLIGHT TAUPE SHIRT $129.95 LINWOOD BROWN CHINO $179.00 ALBORETO BLUE SCARF $149.95 AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 25 M.J. BALE ONLINE THE SHIRT FIT GUIDE M . J. BA LE O N LINE SH IRT F IT GUID E Mjbale.com is the shopping go-to site for your entire clothing needs. We are re-launching the site in the coming months to revolutionise your experience. Until then, keep your eyes peeled (and your mouse clicking). TH E M. J. BA L E S H IRT FIT G UIDE 6-STEPS TO SARTORIAL NIRVANA H OW TO BUY AN M.J. BALE SUIT ONLINE 1. Define Occasion 4. Measured Response In men’s dressing form always follows function. Think about for what occasion or circumstance you need your new suit for. Are you buying it for work, a wedding, cocktail party or something razor sharp and audacious to hit the town in at night? What’s the dea lio, big guy? Get your suiting measurements by putting a tape measure under the broadest part of your chest. Don’t hold the tape too tight, and make sure you’re breathing normally (now is not the time to suck it in). Our jacket sizes are the same as your chest size i.e if you’re a 40-inch chest you will be a size 40 M.J. Bale jacket. Likewise the trousers should correspond to your waist measurement in inches (e.g. 34 inches, size 34), although we do offer the opportunity to mix and match your jacket and trouser sizes if they are different. 2. Climate Control For which season, and in which part of the world will you be wearing said suit? Is it for Sydney and Melbourne (temperate climate), Brisbane (subtropical), Perth and Adelaide (Mediterranean) or elsewhere internationally? We create our suits for the Australian climates, so they are generally made deconstructed (less padding) and mostly from lightweight superfine Australian Merino wool (great all year round). However, depending on your destination, you may decide you want something more specific, like a suit made from cotton, linen or cashmere. 3. Which Style For What? Based on the occasion, is it a single-breasted two-button suit (the majority of our suits) you need, a big-end-of-town double-breasted number, or a 1-button tuxedo for big events. For the latter, think about whether you want to rock a peak or traditional shawl collar. If you want a jacket with a slim, tapered waist make sure you choose one of our Drop 8 ones (Esperance block). If you want a more traditional, classic waistline in your jacket (i.e not as tapered), you’ll look for our Drop 7 (Sydney block). 5. Purchase With all that brain effort (admittedly, a fun one) and measurements done, you’re ready to hit mjbale.com. Take your time to have a good nose around – getting dressed up is the most pleasure-filled activity you can do (note: ‘pleasure-filled activities’ may differ according to each customer’s lifestyle and values). TH E M. J. BA L E C O L L A R G UIDE 6. Alter Boy Depending on your body size, you may or may not need to make slight alterations to the suit to make it fit like a body glove. If you don’t have a good relationship with a local alteration specialist, call M.J. Bale and we’ll point you in the right direction to one near to you (within reason), or we will happily do it for you at one of our flagship stores. Tokyo Dublin Havana Oxford Roman Malmo Small cutaway collar Smaller, softer peak collar Semi-cutaway collar Traditional peak collar Wide cutaway collar Smallest peak collar Used for casual shirting Returns • Complimentary pick-up service on returns for full-priced purchases over $200. (excludes all sale purchases and shirt multi-buy purchases) • 14 days to return the product to us for a refund or exchange (sale product not included) 26 | MJBALE.COM AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 27 ACCESSORIES ACCESSORIES SILVER PROPELLER CUFFLINK $99.95 LEAF BLUE CUFFLINK $99.95 BLUE LOOP CUFFLINK $99.95 NEUTRAL BUTTON CUFFLINK $99.95 FIRTH SQUARE CUFFLINK $99.95 ALVARO CREAM TIE $129.95 JACQUES NAVY 5 FOLD TIE $159.95 MEGEVE BLUE TIE $129.95 JAOQUIN NAVY/YELLOW TIE $129.95 MEGEVE SKY TIE $129.95 SOLOMON CORNFLOWER TIE $129.95 JAOQUIN NAVY/RED TIE $129.95 STELLAN BLUE TIE $99.95 CECIL NAVY TIE $129.95 28 | MJBALE.COM MESSI BROWN BELT $99.95 COROWA RED/BLUE BELT $79.95 MESSI BLACK BELT $99.95 PARKES RED SUEDE BELT $89.95 PARKES TAUPE SUEDE BELT $89.95 BARRABA NAVY/WHITE BELT $89.95 PARKES NAVY SUEDE BELT $89.95 AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 29 CUSTOM SUITS CUSTOM FABRICS C U STO M O F F I C IAL MEN OF TH E (EXCLUSIVE) CLOTH W H Y P UR CHASING A N M .J. BALE CUSTOM SUIT IS T H E SMART EST OPT ION FOR GENTS WANTING INDIVIDUALISATION M.J. BALE C USTO M O FFERS UP FIN E ITA L IA N FA BRIC S N OT AVA IL A BL E IN O UR REA DY-TO -WEA R C O L L EC TIO N S LORO PIANA VITALE BARBERIS CANONICO NAVY PINSTRIPE GREY PRINCE OF WALES SUPER 170S SUPER 150S WITH PINK WINDOWPANE The Dressing Room, George Parade, Malbourne Are you a man that likes nothing better than sifting through hundreds, maybe thousands, of exclusive fabric swatches to choose something completely individual for you, then having the fabric custom made (in some parts by hand) for your body according to your bespoke specifications? Do you want something extremely particular – maybe it’s a double-breasted suit or something in vicuna or cashmere that nobody else has? If so, you will want to make an appointment at one of our flagship stores to try M.J. Bale’s custom suiting service. M.J. Bale Custom is a totally personal and distinctive custom suiting service that delivers you the very pinnacle in high-performance suiting. Constructed in our Japanese tailoring workshop according to your exact measurements and specifications, and with a high degree of hand workmanship, our M.J. Bale Custom suits start from $1500. Customers have the possibility to choose between fabric offerings from Italy’s top weaving mills (although we are also partial to English mills), as well as a wide variety of personalisation details, including number of buttons, width of lapel, lining, canvasses and even an option for an embroidered monogram. You’ll need to allow 8 weeks lead time from fitting to delivery, with 10 weeks advised for weddings (big day, big occasion, fella – we want to get this one right) M.J. Bale Custom also offers a custom shirt service. These made-to-measure shirts start from $150 and feature regular, slim, super-slim and samurai sizing. Different fits are available for collar and body and the service takes advantage of a wealth of high-quality cotton fabrics (allow 5 weeks from fitting to delivery). Speaking of weddings, we here at M.J. Bale love fitting out grooms and their groomsmen. For those grooms in Sydney and Melbourne, we invite you and your wolf pack/groomsmen to our respective Woollahra, Chifley Plaza, George Parade or Chapel Street stores, where we have the by appointment Dressing Rooms. These have been conceived as tailoring man caves stocked with all our greatest wedding and custom suiting options, as well as a Mad Men-style liquor cart. Bring yourself and at least two groomsmen and we will look after you… there are no minimum spend requirements. It’s a place to even bring your bride or parents and the in-laws so they can see the type of discerning, upright man you’ve become (we have champagne for the ladies). Our Dressing Room specialist will be on hand to take you and the crew through the most elegant options for your big day and to help you put together a winning and, most importantly, exceptionally marriage-worthy, look. VITALE BARBERIS CANONICO LORO PIANA NAVY WINDOWPANE FLANNEL BROWN TWEED VITALE BARBERIS CANONICO VITALE BARBERIS CANONICO SUPER 120S SUPER 120S L A BE L BY LA BEL BLUE, CLASSICS OR COLLECT ION? OUR LABELS EXPLAINED Blue Label M.J. Bale’s Blue label shirts and suits are our entry-level collection garments for the man requiring great fit, fabric and function, but at an accessible price point. We keep Blue Label prices low by selecting just a few key fabrics and patterns in shirts and suits (predominantly business styles - checks, plains and stripes). We sell our Blue Label shirts and suits in a multi-buy format (3 for $150 & 2 for $1000 respectively) as well as single purchases. 30 | MJBALE.COM Classics Label M.J. Bale Classics garments (suits, shirts & ties) are stylish, functional garments intended to finely balance between quality and price. Designed with an emphasis on deconstruction style (less padding around the shoulders), Classics suits are hardworking go-to-guys for everyday use (work) and ceremonial functions (weddings, events). Collection Label Besides our Custom program, M.J. Bale Collection (suits, ties & shirts) is the top dog of all our sartorial sub-labels. All Collection suits are woven from Italian fabric created in the centuries-old mills of Vitale Barberis Canonico or Loro Piana in northern Italy. The fabric of our Collection suits is sent to our sartorial workshop in the Japanese Iwate Prefecture for hand-finished construction. All Collection ties are also handmade in Lake Como, Italy. SUPER 110S NAVY TROPICAL SUPER 110S CHARCOAL SHARKSKIN AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 31 AUTUMN/WINTER 15 DEFOE NAVY TUXEDO $995.00 DEFOE NAVY WAISTCOAT $250.00 ETHEREAL WHITE SHIRT $99.95 MEGEVE SKY BOW TIE $99.95 32 | MJBALE.COM AUTUMN/WINTER 15 BUXTON NAVY JACKET $599.00 DAWES RASPBERRY SHIRT $99.95 BUXTON NAVY TROUSER $299.00 JACQUES NAVY 5 FOLD TIE $159.95 GREY CHECK POCKETCHIEF $15.00 AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 33 M.J. BALE’ GUIDE TO ADVENTURES M.J. BALE’S GUIDE TO ADVENTURES M.J. BA LE’S GENTLEM A NLY GUID E TO A DVENTURES “Every man ought to be inquisitive through every hour of his great adventure down to the day when he shall no longer cast a shadow in the sun. For if he dies without a question in his heart, what excuse is there for his continuance?” “Life is either a great adventure or nothing” said the blind American author and activist, Helen Keller. Here at M.J. Bale we think the same - we designed this whole Autumn/Winter 15 collection around the theme of adventure. But how does a gentleman have one? Here is our big suggestion. (Step 1) - Frank Moore Colby CONTEXT They say that death and taxes are the only certainties in life, and, while that’s a maudlin way to look at life, it’s kind of true. Tibetan Buddhists are fond of meditating on death, as it is the only real thing we’re guaranteed of in the end. So, with that in mind, how are you going to live your life, old boy? Is living your life a gift, or a burden? Are you going to focus on the bad and hurt, or the good and opportunity? We say: get the most out of life by treating it like it is one big adventure (which it is). Don’t look back (you’ll get depressed) and don’t look forward (you’ll get anxious). Stay in the present. Be mindful of each waking moment and every person you come into contact with, and hit the metaphorical open road of life. “Most men lead lives of quiet desperation and go to the grave with the song still in them,” said Henry David Thoreau. Don’t let that be you, mate. Live a little. (Step 2) DEFINE ADVENTURE The definition of an adventure is, to paraphrase from various dictionaries littered throughout the M.J. Bale office (yep, we’re a literate bunch here): an exciting or very unusual experience; participation in exciting undertakings; bold, risky or hazardous actions. In short, let’s just call an adventure something bold and exciting. It’s something made with good intentions (a gentleman never sets out to harm others via his actions or words, remember) and makes us feel alive; an adventure makes us feel that our life is filled with meaning, and that we’re not just little, ineffectual cogs in the random wheels of life. (Step 3) IDENTIFY ADVENTURE An adventure is not just a physical pursuit, like pushing off from the coast in a timber dinghy to explore the mating techniques of naval submariners in the Great Southern Oceans or to map the receding hairlines of New Guinea tribesman. An adventure, we think, can be defined as an exploration - an exploration of the mind, the spirit, the heart or, yes, something physical. So, with this definition in mind, here are our suggestions for your next great adventure. VILAS SHAWL COLLAR CABLE SWEATER $299.00 ANDERSON NAVY SHIRT $149.95 CEVERT NAVY TIE $149.95 TYPES OF ADVE NT U R E S BENTINCK BROWN SUIT $899.00 BOAKE NAVY SHIRT $129.95 NEWCOMBE ROSEWOOD SWEATER $169.00 ANGELIS NAVY TIE $149.95 MEGEVE BLUE POCKETCHIEF $29.95 34 | MJBALE.COM THE MIND THE SPIRIT THE HEART THE BODY Exploration of the mind, and pushing it to new heights, is one of the great unheralded adventures. We’re human after all, and are lucky enough to be kitted out with this perfect cerebral tool we call the mind. Learn new things. Read new books. Go back to university and become an expert in a field. Energy and vigour of thought is so important. Learn how to draw or paint. Do some acting. Artists have the ability to create something new and original, and what is life but the most important art form? We’re equipped with these things we call a soul, so let’s use it. One of our favourite quotes is from the author, George Elliot, who said, “Adventure is not outside man; it is within.” True. Learn how to meditate and practise daily mindfulness. Do some charity work and use your special abilities to help another human being in suffering. Just stay present and be aware of the glory held within the minutiae of life. Life’s little joys are there for us to see; open up your eyes and ‘shirtfront’ life like Abbott and Putin in a dream face-off. Love is one of life’s great adventures. It’s risky and so often can leave you broken and in tatters when a bold move doesn’t pay off, but better to try and live a life of love rather than live life as the Mayor of Negative Town thinking “if only.” Take a risk and tell that special person in your life how much they mean to you. Tell your mate he’s a champion bloke. Tell your folks or siblings how much they mean to you. To paraphrase Henry David Thoreau (see Context), just don’t die with the music in you. People might say a physical adventure is just bad planning, but we disagree. You’re equipped with a fine physical vehicle (your body), so use it. Get fit. Push your body to its limits. Feel the burn. Take off and explore territories you’ve never been to. Travel and voyage to different countries and cultures. The biggest danger in life is to do nothing, just make sure you plan properly and tell people where you’re going. AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 35 READY-TO-PACK READY-TO-PACK AINSLEY CHARCOAL SHIRT $129.95 BOAKE NAVY SHIRT $129.95 ANDERSON NAVY SHIRT $149.95 ALVARO SKY TIE $129.95 MEGEVE GREY TIE $129.95 MORITZ RED CHECK TIE $129.95 JAOQUIN NAVY/SKY TIE $129.95 HAMILTON RED KNIT TIE $129.95 HAMILTON GREEN KNIT TIE $129.95 NAVY/RED STRIPED SOCKS $19.95 PIRONI GREY/BLUE SCARF $149.95 ALONSO RED SCARF $149.95 LAUDA NAVY SCARF $149.95 36 | MJBALE.COM PENHALIGONS BAYOLEA EDT 100ML $174.00 VILAS SHAWL COLLAR CABLE KNIT SWEATER $299.00 NEWCOMBE OLIVE SWEATER $169.00 BEULER GREY CABLE KNIT SWEATER $299.00 NEWCOMBE ROSEWOOD SWEATER $169.00 BEULER NAVY CABLE KNIT SWEATER $299.00 NEWCOMBE MARINE SWEATER $169.00 AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 37 THE DAVID BONNEY EDIT THE DAVID BONNEY EDIT T HE DAV ID BO N N EY EDIT 3. Stylist David Bonney’s id Dav onney B BASIC TRAINING Sportswear is never going away (note: that doesn’t include baggy-ass trackies and a $10 polar fleece). Every man needs a few perfectly cut sweatshirts to wear with a t-shirt and chinos, or simply layer under a cotton suit with sneakers. TOP 5 SELECTS from the M.J. Bale Autumn/Winter 2015 collection ALVAREZ NAVY SWEATSHIRT $129.95 AYRES SAND TROUSER $179.00 1. THE INFORMAL FORMAL TUX JACKET The more times you need to front up to a black tie event, the more options you want in your wardrobe. A less structured wool/cotton/ cashmere blend jacket like this Glasgow in shawl collar will still look the money with a crisp white shirt, dark suit pants and a bow tie. It shows imagination and adds some easy to your elegance. 4. GLASGOW BLUE JACKET $499.00 MALUCA NAVY TROUSER $200.00 OWENS WHITE SHIRT $79.95 MAURICIO NAVY BOW TIE $69.95 WHITE POCKETCHIEF $15.00 2. DEVIL IN THE DETAILS (as displayed by Daimon Downey) Dressing with confidence doesn’t mean being a victim; it means paying attention to the details. Open the bottom button on your jacket’s cuffs. Clash your shirt/tie/pocket square, but keep them tonal. Have a great haircut and well-groomed beard. People will notice and love you that little bit more. LEDGER NAVY JACKET $599.00 THAIGO AQUA SHIRT $99.95 LEROY AQUA TIE $99.95 NAVY CHECK POCKETCHIEF $15.00 38 | MJBALE.COM TONAL LAYERS When you want to layer up, look for textures that contrast but colours that are close in tone. Go all-dark, all-pale or all midtone in intensity. This way you can pile on the warmth without looking like that guy with dreadlocks that lives in your local park. VANDERBILT TOBACCO COAT $499.00 BEULER GREY CABLE SWEATER $299.00 BLIGHT TAUPE SHIRT $129.95 LINWOOD BROWN CHINO $179.00 ALBORETO BLUE SCARF $149.95 5. 3-PIECE GOODNESS There are so many great 3-piece suits around this season that every guy can get involved . From straight-up money market stripes to bolder checks and wool flannel textures. Think clean lines or dapper double-breasted waistcoats with lapels. Get dressed up, then take your jacket off and roll your sleeves up to look like a Boardwalk Empire bad-ass. THYNNE DENIM SUIT $899.00 THYNNE DENIM DOUBLE-BREASTED WAISTCOAT $299.00 LENNOX SKY SHIRT $79.95 MEGEVE BLUE TIE $129.95 NAVY CHECK POCKETCHIEF $15.00 EDSON TIE CLIP $79.95 AUTUMN | WINTER | 2015 | 39 SYDNEY | MELBOURNE | BRISBANE | CANBERRA | PERTH | ADELAIDE mjbale.com