A sandwich used to be a simple thing.
The sandwiches you carried along on a family picnic, the sandwiches you wolfed down after school in front of the TV they were never meant to be examples of extravagance or creative disruption. Three or four ingredients did the trick. Bread, ham, cheese, mustard. Bread, turkey, cheese, mayonnaise. Bread, jelly, peanut butter. Overstuffing them ruined them.
Think of a sandwich prized for its thinness, a sandwich made with one slice of meat and one slice of cheese, a sandwich so compact and slim that it can be consumed easily with the use of one hand while the other hand steers a bicycle. We have, in the past decade or so, moved in a different direction from that.
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We Wanted You to Have the Perfect Field Jacket. So We Made One With Anderson & Sheppard.
And now, you can buy it.
Welcome to The Investment, a regular column highlighting those pieces a little pricier, a lot nicer, and entirely worth the money that we can t help but advocate for you owning. These are the things our editors love and respect. The picks with a story to tell and a real reason to exist. Looking to put your dollars in the right place? Here s how.
At Esquire, it goes without saying that we’re always thrilled to pore over the handiwork of our favorite brands. Hey, it’s our job. But it’s exceedingly rare that we get to have a say in how they are made in the first place. In a thrilling departure from the norm on The Investment today, we’re excited to unveil the first high-end fashion collaboration in living memory for Esquire. It’s a singular distinction but we think this Anderson & Sheppard x Esquire moleskin winter safari jacket is mor
Welcome to The Investment, a regular column highlighting those pieces a little pricier, a lot nicer, and entirely worth the money that we can t help but advocate for you owning. These are the things our editors love and respect. The picks with a story to tell and a real reason to exist. Looking to put your dollars in the right place? Here s how.
When it comes to casual clothing, designer Pierre Maheo knows a good thing when he sees it. But that doesn’t mean he won’t change it. The founder and designer of Paris-based Officine Générale has built a solid reputation for his brand, both through his brick-and-mortar stores in Paris and London and online. That’s because Maheo and his team pride themselves on making interesting and accessible clothes with a focus on both innovation and consistency. Not cheap, for sure, but not sticker-shock-inducing either, Officine Générale means well-made, versatile clothing with attitude.
Massimo Alba s Valextra Bag Collab Is Italian Luxury Made Portable Esquire 1/8/2021
Welcome to The Investment, a regular column highlighting those pieces a little pricier, a lot nicer, and entirely worth the money that we can t help but advocate for you owning. These are the things our editors love and respect. The picks with a story to tell and a real reason to exist. Looking to put your dollars in the right place? Here s how.
Italian designer Massimo Alba is a long-term favorite of Esquire for his soft, elegant clothes that seem to come with a life story stitched into the seams. Alba’s clothing is about a casual sense of luxury that is personal to the wearer the opposite of fast fashion and layered with meaning when you get up close. That sense of meaning got a significant boost when Daniel Craig opted to wear Alba’s tan needlecord “Sloop” suit in the yet-to-be-released
Welcome to The Esquire Endorsement. Heavily researched. Thoroughly vetted. These picks are the best way to spend your hard-earned cash.
I would like to state up front that the opinions expressed in this post have been in no way impacted by the Scarf Council, a shadowy cabal of international agents influencing people s every winter neckwear-related move. That is because there is no Scarf Council. Nope. Don t worry about them! They definitely wouldn t have me disappeared just for mentioning their existence, which I definitely am not doing here!
Seriously, though. There s not actually a group of folks who would they be, even? It s fun to think about! who are filling my head with the pro-scarf agenda. I m doing that all on my own. Because even in this world full of technical jackets and puffers and parkas, I still wholeheartedly believe that a good scarf is a genuine winter essential. It ll keep your neck warm, sure. But it ll also seal in the warm air inside your coat, making all of