Two ways to own Quillon: the Standard Collection — six evergreen pieces, built to be worn for a decade — and the Numbered Editions, limited runs of 25–100 pieces each, serialized and archival.
The Standard Collection is not a season. It is a set of six garments chosen for permanence — the jacket, the shirt, the trouser, the vest, the coat, the cap. Each is offered at $295–$495, made from the same American materials as the Numbered Editions, and designed to be worn for ten years without apology. No drops. No scarcity. Just the right six pieces, always available.
A hardworking button-front in 7oz chambray. Two chest pockets, single-needle stitching throughout.
10oz canvas duck in a clean straight cut. No pleats, no taper. Bar-tacked at stress points.
Heavyweight boiled wool. Four pockets. The layer you reach for first when the temperature drops ten degrees.
Fine-gauge American merino. Ribbed cuffs and hem. The sweater that goes with everything, for a long time.
Knee-length, double-faced wool. Single-breasted, four-button. No lining — the wool is enough.
Six-panel, unstructured, in the same canvas as the field jacket. Brass-ring adjuster. Wears in, doesn't wear out.
The Numbered Editions are not restocked. Each drop is 25–100 pieces, each numbered by hand on the embossed leather tag. When they're gone, they're gone. These are the pieces that press runs write about, that end up on shelves next to cameras and old books. Two drops are live now.
A jacket built to outlast its owner. Waxed cotton canvas from Conestoga Woolen Co., Horween leather trim at collar and cuffs, cut and sewn at Harlow Cut & Sew. Every piece numbered. Every piece made once.
Heavyweight American wool, unlined. Horn buttons from the same craftsmen who finished the field jacket. Cut at Harlow Cut & Sew. Fifty pieces, each numbered by hand. An overshirt built for the long run — thick enough to stand alone, honest enough to wear out.
The next numbered edition is in development. American materials. Harlow Cut & Sew. Limited run. We're not saying what it is yet — but the waitlist gets word first.
Join the Waitlist