Mason's Blazer for Men

The Mason’s blazer is born from the encounter between two opposing forces: the precision of tailoring and the freedom of everyday life. It doesn’t just complete a look — it defines an attitude. Formal in cut, contemporary in function.
In the FW25 Mason’s collection, its language is renewed with materials that combine performance and tradition. Comfort and construction coexist. A hybrid garment. City and travel, work and leisure. The same elegance.
Materials and Innovation
At Mason’s, fabric is not a detail but the starting point.
Every FW25 blazer is the result of research that merges textile tradition with technical experimentation, aiming to combine structure and movement.
The velvet introduces visual depth and tactile warmth, while the stretch gabardine ensures lightness and freedom in everyday gestures.
The Active 4.0 jersey, with its elastic memory and crease resistance, translates tailoring into performance: a jacket that follows the body rather than constraining it.
Finally, the stretch jersey takes the concept to a more urban dimension — less rigid, more dynamic, yet equally precise in construction.
This is where Mason’s builds its idea of the contemporary blazer: a garment that belongs both to tradition and to the present, capable of moving through places and roles without losing coherence.
Models and Fit
The Da Vinci is the centerpiece of the FW25 collection: the blazer that best expresses Mason’s identity, where function and construction coexist in balance.
Designed as a tailored jacket, conceived for everyday life, the Da Vinci maintains a sharp structure and precise proportions, offering both comfort and definition.
In velvet, it conveys visual depth and warmth; in stretch gabardine, it becomes dynamic and versatile; in Active 4.0 jersey, it interprets tailoring as movement — following the body without constraining it. It’s a jacket that accompanies you, moving seamlessly through moments and settings.

Alongside it, the Roma embodies tradition in its purest form.
Crafted in herringbone wool, it combines rigor and texture, restoring the blazer’s most authentic soul. The construction is essential, proportions are balanced, details are minimal yet precise. A jacket that speaks through its material.

Both models find their natural continuity in chino pants by Mason’s, completing a wardrobe designed to adapt to any context.
With the Milano Jogger in velvet or jersey, the blazer takes on a more contemporary tone. With the New York Time 1 Pinces in cotton or wool, it creates a more tailored, rigorous yet modern look. The Boston, with its relaxed fit, interprets a softer elegance — perfect for those who choose comfort as a form of style.
In every combination, the principle remains the same: balance, coherence, construction. Because the Mason’s blazer is not a complement, but the meeting point between style and function.
Lasting Construction
The Mason’s FW25 blazer doesn’t follow the seasons — it transcends them. Elegance does not depend on the occasion, but on construction. From Da Vinci to Roma: exact proportions, durable materials, and lines that retain their shape over time.
Paired with Mason’s chinos, it becomes either formal or casual, depending on the context. An essential garment — built to accompany, not to appear.
FAQ - Mason’s Blazer
What’s the difference between a jacket and a blazer?
A jacket is born as part of a suit, with fabric and cut matching the trousers. The blazer, instead, is a standalone piece: it maintains tailored structure and rigor but with more versatile materials and an independent character. It’s designed to be worn beyond formal settings.
How should a man wear a blazer?
With a shirt and chinos for a refined look. With knitwear and denim for everyday elegance. With cargo pants for a more urban attitude. The key is balance: clean lines, freedom in combinations.
How should a blazer fit?
A blazer should naturally follow the body’s shape, enhancing its structure without stiffness. The shoulders should fall straight, without creases or tension; the chest should close easily without fabric pulling at the buttons. The sleeves should end just above the shirt cuff, while the length should cover the hips, creating a balanced silhouette.