
The Showroom
A working tailoring house in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. The world's finest cloth selected, cut, and fitted in a controlled environment — without crowds, without rush, without a sales floor.
Our Williamsburg loft serves the creative directors, architects, design studio principals, and startup founders who built this neighborhood's professional class. The men whose work runs on different conventions than the financial district — softer, more textured, and frequently more interesting in cut and cloth. Every commission begins with one conversation, one set of measurements, and one pattern drafted to the man — not adjusted from a stock block.
Defined by pattern origin — not alteration.
105 North 13th Street
Brooklyn, NY 11249
Thursday - Sunday
Bedford Av (L) — 4 min walk
Nassau Av (G) — 8 min walk
NYC Ferry (North Williamsburg) — 6 min walk
Domino Park · McCarren Park · Wythe Hotel · Brooklyn Brewery · Williamsburg Bridge
Williamsburg · Greenpoint (adjacent) · East Williamsburg (adjacent)
The 25 Kent Avenue Garage is located just steps away on N 13th Street between Kent Avenue and Wythe Avenue. Additional garages are available nearby on Driggs Avenue and Rodney Street. Metered street parking is also available in the surrounding blocks.
Icon Parking — 24 East 41st Street
Champion Parking — 50 East 42nd Street
Our Williamsburg showroom is located at 105 N 13th Street. If traveling by subway, the Bedford Avenue station (L train) is a short walk away.
If you have any questions about getting here, feel free to call us directly at (888) 622-3696.
Custom Tailoring in Williamsburg
For more than a decade, Enzo Custom has dressed the senior creative class that built North Brooklyn. Our Williamsburg clients arrive between agency leadership meetings, design studio reviews, and the founder calendar that runs differently from Manhattan. Each custom suit and jacket is drafted from the individual, fitted under controlled conditions, and delivered with our Perfect Fit Assurance.
The result is wardrobe architecture, not a wardrobe transaction: softer construction and more textured cloth than the Midtown register, sport coats commissioned at scale, and lifetime alterations on every garment we make. To see how this differs from made-to-measure, read Custom vs. Made-to-Measure.
Modern Tailoring in Brooklyn
The Williamsburg wardrobe runs differently from any other location in the network. The men we dress here are senior — agency leadership, architects with practices, founders past their first exit — but the rooms they operate in reward a different kind of tailoring. Softer shoulders. Slightly higher armhole. Half-canvas and unstructured construction more frequently than full canvas. Hopsack instead of fresco. Textured navy instead of plain worsted. Cashmere sport coats with denim. Brushed flannel suits worn with brown calf. The cuts are not casual — they are still drafted to the individual, fitted under controlled conditions, and built with the construction that allows a garment to last a decade. But the register is unmistakably different from Midtown. The formal calendar is sparser; the daily wardrobe is more varied. Sport coats are commissioned more frequently than two-piece suits. Trousers are ordered separately. Casual tailoring — the unstructured travel blazer, the cashmere cardigan-jacket — is treated as its own category. Each commission is patterned to the individual and archived for life.
Brooklyn's wardrobe runs on its own register.
Considered, never costumed.
What to Expect
The Appointment
Private. One client at a time. Ninety minutes for the first meeting, fewer for returns. No appointment is double-booked.
The Pattern
An individual pattern, drafted from your measurements alone and archived for life. Every garment we make for you is cut from this pattern — never altered from a stock block.
The Cloth
Loro Piana, Ermenegildo Zegna, Holland & Sherry, Dormeuil, Scabal, and Enzo Sartori. Textured worsted, hopsack, cashmere, mohair-blend, and the slightly less conventional cloths that read correctly here.
The Commission
Three controlled fittings. Lifetime support available on every garment (alterations and repairs after 30 days from pickup are additional charges). Perfect Fit Assurance on every garment. The relationship continues for the life of the cloth.
Each commission is conducted by a senior clothier of the house.

Inside Our Jackets
Floating canvas — never fused. Hand-padded chest piece and lapel. Horsehair and natural canvas through the body. Milanese buttonhole on the lapel. The construction is the reason a custom jacket holds its line for twenty years.
Read: Inside Our JacketsServices
For clients outside the city. Initial measurements taken in showroom; subsequent reviews remote.
Coordinated fittings for grooms, fathers, and groomsmen. Travel fittings available.
Quarterly travel fittings to select cities for established clients.
Frequently Asked
What is the price range for a custom suit?
Pricing begins at $545 for a custom suit and rises with fabric selection. Tuxedos start at $595, and custom shirts start at $125. Every garment includes a fully custom pattern, canvas construction, and fittings and adjustments. Specific pricing is discussed in showroom.
How long does a first suit take?
Typically four to five weeks from initial appointment to final fitting. Rush options are available in approximately three weeks for urgent needs.
What is Perfect Fit Assurance?
Every garment we make is guaranteed to fit. If anything is off, we recut it. The pattern is yours for life, and we adjust as you do.
Do you make tuxedos and overcoats as well as suits?
Yes. The same pattern, the same canvas, the same cloth houses. Tuxedos for the calendar's most formal evenings; overcoats for the city's winters.
Can I order remotely?
All fittings and measurements must be conducted in person at our showroom. We do not accept measurements taken remotely. Once your initial appointment is complete, we keep your pattern and measurements on file for future orders.
Do you make unstructured jackets and casual tailoring?
Yes. Williamsburg commissions tend toward softer construction — half-canvas, unstructured travel jackets, cashmere sport coats — and more textured cloth. The pattern is the same; the construction adapts to the register.