If you've ever bought a 32" inseam and let it ride above the ankle, or rolled up the cuff because that was the longest the shop carried — this is what fixes it. We don't use stocked length increments. The sleeve is your sleeve. The inseam is your inseam.
Department-store "Tall" sizing usually means +1.5" on the sleeve and +2" on the jacket — fixed increments. If your actual numbers fall between two of those increments, you're still wearing a compromise. The trouser inseam ceiling at most retailers is 32"; if you wear a 34" or 36", you're tailoring everything anyway.
Online MTM is an upgrade — but most platforms still draft from a base pattern that assumed average height, then stretch. Past 6'4" or so, the stretch math breaks: jacket length doesn't scale with shoulder width the way the algorithm thinks it does, button stance lands too high, lapel proportions get awkward.
At RemoteSuit, your jacket and trousers are cut from your specific numbers — sleeve, torso, inseam, button stance, lapel proportion — by a Hoi An workshop that has been doing this for 20+ years. Real review of every measurement before cutting. From $109.
No "Long" sleeve at +1.5". Your sleeve is your sleeve.
We measure torso directly. Tall guys with shorter torsos and tall guys with longer torsos get different jackets — the same height number doesn't imply the same length.
Whatever you measure. 34", 36", 38" — same price, same lead time.
A high button stance on a tall guy makes the jacket look short even when length is correct. Subtle but reads instantly on camera.
Standard lapel widths (8.5cm) look narrower on a long torso. We can scale the lapel up half a centimeter if you want — your call in the Atelier.
A real atelier rep checks every measurement before the pattern is drafted — so proportions translate properly to a longer frame.
Free, no signup. The Atelier renders the suit before you commit.