Tailored to You: The Best Bespoke Suit and Shirt Makers in the City
Discover Paris's premier bespoke tailors like Camps de Luca and Stark & Sons, crafting suits that fit perfectly with artisanal precision. Elevate your style on your next luxury trip.

Off-the-rack suits fit the average body, which means they fit nobody particularly well. Paris has understood this for centuries, which explains why the city still houses ateliers where tailors measure you in thirty different places, argue about shoulder pitch, and spend eighty hours constructing a suit that will outlast most relationships. It's expensive. It's slow. It's also the only way to own clothing that actually fits.
Camps de Luca
Since 1969, this family business at 5 Rue de Castiglione has made bespoke suits in the tradition of its founders—Joseph Camps and Mario de Luca. Full bespoke means five people spending eighty hours on your suit, multiple fittings over several months, construction entirely by hand. The house holds Living Heritage Company status, France's designation for craftsmen preserving endangered techniques. Expect prices starting around €4,000 for a two-piece suit, though complex fabrics or details push higher.
Chic Tip: First consultation lasts two hours. Block your afternoon—rushing this process defeats the purpose.
Stark & Sons
At 5 Rue Scribe near the Opera, three generations of the Stark family have cut uniforms and civilian suits since 1910. They still specialize in military and ceremonial dress—the kind of precision tailoring where a millimeter matters—but also make excellent business suits for clients who appreciate that level of exactitude. The atelier maintains pattern records dating back decades, meaning if you commissioned a suit in 1985, they can recreate it today.
Chic Tip: Their shirt service gets overlooked but delivers exceptional quality. Order both suits and shirts together for better fabric coordination.
Jean-Manuel Moreau
This shop delivers southern Italian-style tailoring—softer shoulders, higher armholes, more drape than British cuts—through a made-to-measure system that splits the difference between full bespoke and off-the-rack. The fit has proven remarkably consistent across multiple commissions, which matters when you're trusting someone with several thousand euros and can't easily verify quality until delivery. Good option for first-timers who want serious tailoring without committing to full bespoke's cost and timeline.
Chic Tip: Try them for seasonal pieces first—a linen suit or tweed jacket—before committing to business workhorse garments.
Confident Paris
At 11 Rue Montorgueil, this atelier operates from a first-floor apartment you'd walk past without noticing. Ring the bell, climb the stairs, and discover 130 base patterns that get personalized and adjusted to your measurements. It's speakeasy tailoring—hidden, intimate, focused entirely on the work rather than showroom presentation. Made-to-measure rather than full bespoke, which keeps prices reasonable while delivering superior fit to anything off-the-rack.
Chic Tip: Their measuring process uses sixty different points for precision. Wear thin clothing to your fitting so measurements aren't skewed by bulk.
Bespoke tailoring requires understanding the difference between made-to-measure and full bespoke, knowing which houses match your budget and aesthetic preferences, and accepting that quality takes time. Those distinctions separate people who own one exceptional suit from those collecting ill-fitting compromises. We connect clients with appropriate tailors because fit matters more than fashion, and Paris still has craftsmen who understand that. If that interests you, we're here.


