Why Jacket Fit Matters More Than You Think — and How to Get It Right
The design on your custom jacket can be perfect, but if the fit is wrong, the jacket looks wrong. Here's why fit is the most underrated element of a group jacket order — and exactly how to get it right for every person in your team.
Why Jacket Fit Matters More Than You Think — and How to Get It Right
In a group jacket order, it's easy to focus on the things that feel most visible: the colours, the logo, the patches, the personalisation. But the element that has the single biggest impact on how the jacket actually looks on a person? Fit. And it's the one that gets the least attention until something goes wrong.
A jacket with a perfect design but a bad fit looks cheap. A simple jacket with a perfect fit looks premium. Here's why this matters so much — and how to get it right for every person in your order.
Why Fit Makes or Breaks the Jacket
Clothes communicate two things simultaneously: the design, and how the person wearing them feels about themselves. A well-fitting jacket communicates confidence. It sits correctly at the shoulder, doesn't pull across the chest, allows comfortable arm movement, and falls at the right length on the torso. When someone puts it on and it fits properly, they stand differently. They wear it more.
A poorly fitting jacket does the opposite. Shoulders that are too wide make the person look smaller. A chest that's too tight looks uncomfortable and strains seams. A hem that's too long makes the jacket look borrowed. These are the things that make people leave the jacket in the cupboard instead of wearing it.
For group orders, this is amplified. If most of the team's jackets fit well but a handful don't, those individuals feel singled out — even if no one mentions it. The goal of a team jacket is unity and pride, and a poor fit undermines both.
The Most Common Fit Mistakes in Group Orders
The most common error is people self-reporting sizes from another brand without accounting for sizing differences. Brand A's large is not always Brand B's large. Without a size guide specific to the jacket being ordered, people guess — and guesses are often wrong.
The second most common error is people sizing down because they don't want to appear to be a larger size. The result is a jacket that's too tight across the shoulders or chest, pulls when they move, and looks strained.
The third is not accounting for layering. A jacket worn directly over a t-shirt in summer may need to be a size larger than expected if it's going to be worn over a thick jumper or hoodie in winter.
How to Measure Correctly for a Custom Jacket
The most important measurement for a jacket is chest circumference. Measure around the fullest part of the chest, keeping the tape horizontal and adding 2-4 inches of ease for a regular fit (more for an oversized style). This measurement, compared against the supplier's size chart, gives you the correct size regardless of what size the person normally buys in other brands.
For teams, the most practical approach is to provide a size chart alongside your size collection form. Ask people to measure their chest and match it to the chart rather than selecting a size by letter. This one step alone dramatically reduces the number of sizing issues in a group order.
Should You Size Up or Down When In Between?
For structured jackets — varsity, bombers, anything with a defined shoulder seam — size up when in between. A jacket that's slightly large can be worn comfortably and still looks intentional. A jacket that's slightly small looks tight and feels restrictive.
For more relaxed silhouettes — coach jackets, fleeces, puffer jackets — either size works, but sizing true-to-measurement gives the cleanest result.
What Clothaa Does to Help
When you place an order with us, we provide a detailed size guide for the specific jacket style you're ordering. Sizing varies between jacket constructions, and we don't expect customers to guess — we give you the exact chest-to-size conversion and flag common sizing considerations for the specific garment.
If you're unsure about any sizing decisions, our team is happy to review your size list before it's finalised and flag anything that looks like it might result in a poor fit. Getting the fit right is part of getting the order right — and we'd rather spend five minutes on a call sorting it out than have your team receive jackets that don't sit properly.
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