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Every bespoke jacket is more than its outer cloth. Beneath the wool, beneath the lining, lies an internal architecture — a canvas — that gives a jacket its shape, its drape, and its soul.
THE FOUNDATION
The Anatomy of a Jacket:
Full Canvas vs. Half Canvas
The canvas is a layer of horsehair and wool stitched between the outer fabric and the inner lining. It is the reason a flat piece of cloth can mirror the human form — providing the three-dimensional structure that no flat textile could achieve alone.
Where the canvas sits, how it is attached, and what it is made from determines whether your jacket is a masterwork of tailoring — or a commodity.
FULL CANVAS
Full Canvas:
The Bespoke Gold Standard
A full canvas jacket is the pinnacle of tailoring craft. The horsehair interlining runs from the shoulder all the way to the hem — hand-stitched, floating freely within the jacket’s structure, never glued.

- Because the canvas is floating — hand-stitched, never bonded — the jacket moves with your body. Over months of wearing, the canvas literally molds to your posture, creating a fit unique to you.
- Full canvas produces the most natural lapel roll — that elegant, three-dimensional curve from collar to button that flatters the chest. It cannot be replicated by glue or machine-stitching. III
- Without glue to degrade or delaminate, a full canvas suit maintained well can last 20, 30, even 40 years. It is the only true investment garment in tailoring.
- Natural horsehair and wool canvas allows air to circulate through the garment — an important quality in Singapore's climate, and a defining comfort advantage over fused construction.
HALF CANVAS
Half Canvas: The Smart Compromise
In this construction, the canvas extends from the shoulder down to the mid-chest. The lower half of the jacket is reinforced with a lightweight fusible (glue).

- The Benefit: You get the most important structural benefits—a crisp shoulder and a structured chest—at a more accessible price point.
- The Aesthetic: To the untrained eye, a half canvas jacket looks nearly identical to a full canvas one. It provides a better drape than a fully "fused" (glued) mass-market suit.
- Who is it for? Ideal for those who want a high-quality garment for daily business wear without the higher cost of full hand-canvassing.
The ŠAKAL Philosophy: “A suit should not just fit; it should evolve. While half canvas offers incredible value, we recommend full canvas for our most luxurious fabrics to achieve that signature 3D silhouette that never goes out of style.”
FUSED
Fused Construction: A Fast Solution for Affordable Pricing
Unlike Full Canvas or Half Canvas methods that utilize sewn-in fabric canvases, a fused suit uses a synthetic interlining. This lining is bonded (using heat and pressure) with adhesive to the back of the suit’s outer fabric.

- Mass & Speed Production: This method is highly efficient for mass production, allowing manufacturers to create suits quickly and in large quantities, which significantly drives down production costs.
- Drape Characteristics: Fused suits tend to have a stiffer, less natural "drape" (how the fabric hangs). The fabric doesn't "breathe" as well because the layer of glue blocks air circulation.
- Minimal Shape Adaptation: Since the lining is glued rather than "floating" like a canvas, a fused suit will not adapt to your body shape over time. The suit's silhouette remains exactly as it was when you first bought it.
- The Risk of "Bubbling": The biggest drawback of fused construction is the risk of the adhesive delaminating over time—especially when exposed to the heat of dry cleaning or pressing. This causes small bubbles to appear on the surface of the fabric, which are irreparable and permanently ruin the suit's appearance.
“At ŠAKAL, we stand by the principle of timeless quality. We do not recommend Fused construction as it does not align with the standards of durability and comfort we offer. We encourage every client to invest in quality that lasts and develops character over time.”
AT A GLANCE
01
Full Canvas
Hand-stitched horsehair canvas running shoulder to hem. The floating construction molds to your body over time — the pinnacle of tailoring craft.
Šakal Recommended
02
Half Canvas
Canvas through the chest and shoulder; lightweight fusible below. Excellent structural quality at an accessible price — ideal for daily business wear.
Available at Šakal
03
Full Canvas
Synthetic interlining bonded with adhesive throughout. Efficient for mass production; prone to bubbling, stiff drape, and no body-adaptive qualities.
Not offered at Šakal
| Feature | Full Canvas | Half Canvas | Fused |
|---|---|---|---|
| Contruction | Hand-stitched throughout | Stitched chest, fused below | Glued throughout |
| Drape | Superior, natural flow | Good, slightly stiffer bottom | Stiff, limited movement |
| Durability | Highest (20+ years) | High (5–10 years) | Moderate — risk of bubbling |
| Breathability | Excellent (Natural fibers) | Good (upper body) | Poor (glue blocks airflow) |
| Price | Premium (High labor) | Mid-range | Low |
| Body Adaption | Yes — molds over time | Partial — upper body only | None |
| Lapel Roll | Natural 3D roll | Good — close to full canvas | Flat — machine-pressed |
| At SAKAL | ✓ Recommended | ✓ Available | Not offered |
THE SAKAL PHILOSOPHY
Why Construction Defines the Garment
When you commission a bespoke suit, you are not simply buying cloth shaped to your measurements. You are commissioning an object built to last — to improve with time, to record the history of your body and your life in its fibres and its drape.
For our finest cloths — the Loro Piana cashmeres, the Scabal Super 160s, the Dormeuil Amadeus — we recommend full canvas without exception. These fabrics deserve construction that matches their quality. A fused interlining bonded to a Loro Piana cashmere would be an act of disrespect to the cloth.
We recommend full canvas for our most luxurious fabrics to achieve that signature three-dimensional silhouette — one that never goes out of style, because it was never in it.
— Šakal Atelier · Haji Lane, Singapore
If you are considering your first bespoke commission, or weighing the difference for your next, we invite you to visit our atelier. Handling the two constructions in person — feeling the difference in a lapel’s natural roll, the way a canvassed chest breathes against you — is the only argument that fully convinces.



