We’re back — after a short break and the arrival of our second child — to talk transitional dressing. That tricky, beautiful in-between where it’s not quite summer, not quite fall. In this episode, we get into the fabrics that work best when the weather can’t decide, and why this space between seasons might actually be where the best wardrobes live.
In this episode of Quiet Form, we explore the quiet dignity of heavy luggage — packing tailoring for travel, dressing with intention, and the myth of the minimalist traveler. From fresco suits to linen jackets and loafers with trees inside, each garment becomes a silent promise to arrive ready, moving through the world with grace wherever you land.
In this episode of Quiet Form, we consider tailoring in cinema — not as ornament, but as form. From the quiet structure of Caine’s flannel to the precision of McQueen and the effortlessness of Delon, we reflect on how fit, cloth, and restraint shape the men we remember.
In this episode of Quiet Form, we explore tailoring in the warmest season—a study in discipline, drape, and the beauty of form when the world comes undone. From linen’s noble wrinkles to the quiet strength of fresco, summer tailoring isn’t about sweating through tradition—it’s about remaining composed. Host Robert Yarish reflects on the history, materials, and mindset behind dressing with purpose when it’s easiest not to.
A narrow strip of silk. Once a symbol of conformity, now a mark of discretion. This episode reflects on the tie’s quiet return—not as a trend, but as a gesture. We explore how its meaning has shifted, why certain men are choosing to wear it again, and what it communicates in a world that rarely asks for it. Fewer rules, more nuance. Not a statement—an attitude.
Not all structure is loud. This episode explores the invisible architecture of great tailoring — canvas. Horsehair, hand-stitched, and hidden from view, it’s what gives a jacket its shape, its soul, and its ability to age with grace. From Neapolitan ateliers to Savile Row, canvas is the internal scaffolding that makes elegance feel effortless.
A quiet ode to the things we keep. The cracked watch, the coat that doesn’t quite work, the ashtray that’s never used — worn objects that carry memory, not function. In this episode, we explore the personal poetry of patina, and why some things stay, even when they stop working.
A reflection on the tension between minimalism and maximalism — and why both can be expressions of presence, not extremes. This episode explores the poetry of restraint, the quiet power of fit and silhouette, and the soft richness of texture that doesn’t need to shout to be heard. From the discipline of a navy fresco jacket to the charm of old Hermès and Lovat tweeds, it’s a conversation about tailoring that disappears and tailoring that lingers. A meditation on intention, material memory, and the subtle ways we shape who we are — through what we choose to wear, and what we choose to leave out.
A meditation on why we keep dressing like the same ten men. McQueen, Newman, Dean — not for the fit, but for the feeling. This episode reflects on the myth-making around timeless style, the softness of old photographs, and why it’s rarely the clothes we’re after. It’s the cigarette, the car, the squint — the story wrapped in cloth. A quiet reflection on charisma, nostalgia, and the search for something of our own — and how, through tailoring, we try to shape not just what we wear, but who we are becoming.
In Made to Wait, we explore the quiet power of patience — in craft, in culture, and in life. A reflection on slowness as an essential ingredient: how waiting deepens our connection to the things we choose, and why some of the most meaningful creations are those that ask more of us.
A short reflection on linen at the start of spring. Why it matters, how it wears, and what it signals. A quiet entry into the season — and the series.