Made to Measure Suits

The suit remains the foundation of a considered wardrobe. At Wynona, it is approached with restraint, cut to follow the body, not impose upon it. Each garment is made in Portugal using full canvas construction, allowing the cloth to move and settle naturally over time.

The house expression favors softness. Shoulders are lightly built, lines are clean, and proportion is given space to breathe. The intention is not immediacy, but permanence, pieces designed to feel as relevant years from now as they do today.

While the range of cloths and design options is extensive, the process remains focused. Each commission is developed in dialogue, refining fit, balance, and character through careful consideration.

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Craft


All Wynona garments are produced in Portugal, in collaboration with a third-generation family workshop. The work is guided by continuity, knowledge passed through hands rather than systems.

Each piece begins with an individual pattern and moves through a measured sequence of cutting, construction, and finishing. The process is deliberate, carried out without the compression of industrial timelines, allowing the garment to take shape with care and precision.

The workshop operates on a smaller scale, with a focus on consistency and responsibility. Production is paced, materials are respected, and the people behind the work remain central to it. The result is not only in how the garment looks, but in how it has been made.

Materials

Cloth sits at the centre of every Wynona garment. It is not selected to decorate, but to define how a piece moves, settles, and endures. The offering brings together fabrics from established mills in Italy and Great Britain, alongside smaller, more considered developments produced in limited runs. Each cloth is chosen with intent, guided by hand, drape, and how it will wear over time.

The range spans seasons and uses, yet remains restrained in expression. Texture, weight, and finish are favoured over overt pattern or excess. What distinguishes each piece is not how it announces itself, but how it lives quietly within a wardrobe.