The structure here is correct: single-breasted button fastening, notched lapel, chest welt pocket, two front welt pockets, buttoned cuffs. The silhouette reads as tailored in every dimension that tailoring depends on. Then the fabric intervenes. The viscose-polyamide-elastane velvet has been treated to produce an irregular textured surface -- the pile does not lie uniformly, it sits at varying heights and angles across the body, creating a tonal depth that shifts from flat black to charcoal depending on the angle of light. The 5% elastane keeps the construction from reading rigid; there is a subtle give at the shoulder and across the back that means the blazer moves with the body rather than against it.
Nostra Santissima built this piece for men who want the language of the blazer without its compliance. The conventional markers are all present -- the notch, the welt, the button cuff -- but the surface disrupts any reading of the piece as standard suiting. The irregular texture maps the body differently at every wear, deepening in creased areas over time, lightening where the fabric stretches. What arrives as a black blazer becomes, with wear, a record of how its specific owner moves. The Italian construction underneath holds the shape; the treatment above it evolves.









