The house code is the Neapolitan silhouette itself: a slim waist, high armholes, a generous sleeve-head and minimal shoulder padding. Vincenzo's son Cesare built the system to produce and market it at scale, and the brand is now run by his grandsons Giuseppe and Massimiliano Attolini, who have led its international expansion. In 2015 it acquired the Umbrian knitwear maker Fioroni.
Cesare Attolini
The birthplace of the Neapolitan jacket — soft shoulders, high armholes, cut near Naples since the 1930s.
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Cesare Attolini shopping FAQ
Is a Cesare Attolini suit worth it?+
Cesare Attolini sits at the top of menswear because it is, in effect, the house that invented the soft Neapolitan jacket. You are paying for handwork, an artisanal cut and a silhouette designed to move with the body rather than armour it. For someone who wants the purest expression of Neapolitan tailoring and intends to wear and keep it for decades, it earns the spend; for an occasional suit, it is more than most need.
Why are Cesare Attolini suits so expensive?+
The price reflects how the garment is built: an Attolini is a high-luxury, largely hand-made piece rooted in the Neapolitan method that Vincenzo Attolini created. The soft construction, lightly padded shoulder and hand-finishing take real skill and time, and the house keeps close to traditional tailoring rather than industrial shortcuts. You are buying craft and a cut that few makers can replicate.
What is the signature Cesare Attolini look?+
It is the Neapolitan silhouette that founder Vincenzo Attolini created: a slim waist, high armholes, a generous sleeve-head and minimal shoulder padding. The effect is a jacket that feels almost like a shirt across the shoulders, soft and unstructured where English tailoring is stiff. That softness is the whole point of the house.
Cesare Attolini vs Kiton, which should I choose?+
Both are Naples houses at the summit of tailoring, and the choice is about temperament. Cesare Attolini is the originator of the soft Neapolitan jacket and stays close to that traditional artisanal cut, which appeals to purists who want classic Neapolitan elegance. If you are weighing it against Kiton or Isaia, pick Attolini for heritage and the founding silhouette.
Who founded Cesare Attolini and when?+
The brand was founded in Casalnuovo di Napoli in the 1930s by Vincenzo Attolini, who is credited as the creator of the Neapolitan tailoring style. His son, Cesare Attolini, then built the system to produce the garments at scale and market the brand. The house carries the son's name but the cut is the father's invention.
Is Cesare Attolini still family-run?+
Yes. The brand is run by Vincenzo Attolini's grandsons, Giuseppe and Massimiliano Attolini, who have led its international expansion. That keeps the house in the founding family across three generations. It remains a family enterprise rather than a conglomerate label.
Does Cesare Attolini make anything besides suits?+
Tailored menswear is the core, but in 2015 the house acquired Fioroni, an Umbria-based knitwear maker founded in 1978 in Castiglione del Lago. Fioroni began as a small artisanal workshop doing embroidery and handcrafted textiles before moving into knitwear. The acquisition brought hand-finished knits under the Attolini umbrella.
Where can I buy Cesare Attolini in person?+
The house keeps a small set of retail locations: Milan on Via Bagutta, Miami Beach at the Bal Harbour Shops, New York City on Madison Avenue, London on Mount Street in Mayfair, plus Monaco and Moscow. Buying in person lets you feel the soft construction and get the fit right. For a garment this hand-built, that fitting matters.
What makes Neapolitan tailoring different?+
Neapolitan tailoring, the tradition Vincenzo Attolini is credited with creating, favours softness over rigid structure: high armholes for ease of movement, a generous sleeve-head and very little shoulder padding. The jacket drapes and moves rather than holding a stiff line. Attolini is the house most directly tied to that approach's origins.
How should I care for a Cesare Attolini jacket?+
Treat a soft, hand-made jacket gently: let it rest a day between wears on a broad wooden hanger, brush it rather than over-dry-cleaning, and steam out creases instead of pressing the life out of the soft shoulder. The lightly padded, hand-shaped construction is what gives the garment its character, so you want to preserve it. A good tailor, not aggressive cleaning, is its best friend.