Every day on the run, the busy city man needs a well-rounded suit both supple and crease-resistant. This functional suit comes directly from the movie screen which is what James Bond would wear. A grey glen checks simple but an effortless pair for the best MI6 Agent.

 
 
 

MAN ON A MISSION. Is featured on James Bond’s return to London and to his old Whitehall office in No Time to Die, he dresses just like he used to in the most classically Bondian way possible. 

His outfit recalls not only Daniel Craig’s previous wardrobes but also Connery’s. He had to wear a garment that made him look like he belongs, and one that tells us James Bond is back. This garment is a grey Glen Urquhart check suit.

James Bond has rarely worn checked suits to the office since they’re not traditionally formal business attire in London, particularly in a high-contrast check. The Glen Urquhart check, also known as a Prince of Wales check, is slightly sporty and relaxed, but it’s a classic check that doesn’t raise eyebrows. Solids and stripes were Bond’s usual choices for the office, but this isn’t the first time Bond wears a checked suit to the office; he wears them in Goldfinger, GoldenEye, and Skyfall

Since in the movie James Bond is a visitor to MI6 in No Time to Die rather than an employee, he’s dressing as the former. 

The suit looks serious enough for the occasion without making Bond look like an employee.

 
 
 

The suit is almost the same style as the Tom Ford ‘O’Connor’ suits from Spectre with a  ‘three-roll-two’. The jacket is cut like one with two buttons, and there’s a third button and buttonhole hidden under the lapel. Together matching the Made Suits MILANO cut with coll rollino shoulders. Matching it with Tomford Signatures with the sleeves last buttonhole longer than the others, and 3.5 cm Milanese lapel hole on the lapels. The Jacket has a single vent in the rear of the jacket, following Craig’s preferred style since Skyfall. The jacket has narrow, high-gorge notched lapels