8 in stock
Your purchase will arrive within 1-2 or 3-5 days depending on your choice of delivery. A confirmation email will be sent once your order has been despatched. Please see full delivery terms here.
This item can be returned or exchanged within 30 days of receipt.
Huntsman Made-To-Order garments are delivered within 4 weeks. If purchased in conjunction with other products, your Ready-To-Wear and accessories will be delivered separately within 1 – 2 working days as standard, with Made To Order garments arriving in a separate delivery.
If your order has been sent to a destination within the EU, all sales taxes will be refunded. Outside the EU, customs duties and sales taxes are non-refundable through Huntsman. However, you may be able to recover these by contacting your local customs bureau directly. As this may not be available for all countries, we recommend that you hire a customs broker if you wish to claim back duties on returned merchandise. Please see full returns terms here
With over 120 exclsuive designs, you're sure to find a tie for every occasion with Huntsman. Discover more about the inspiration and craftsmanship behind the collection.
Once worn with colonial uniforms in the tropics due to its lightweight and breathable qualities, the Grenadine tie is also incredibly rich in texture and colour. Using a traditional loom facilitates alternating silk colours to be woven in parallel. It is this technique that provides an impressive ‘subtle flecking of colour’ effect that runs throughout the designs. The intricate weave provides a textural gauze-like feel for a further subtle point of difference.
Grenadine ties are celebrated for their versatility because they work equally well with suiting, as they do with separates.
We source the rich silk from ‘Vanners’ founded by the Vanners brothers in 1740. Over the years Huntsman have built a strong alliance with Vanners Mill, located in Sudbury. The Vanners silk business withstood the tribulations surrounding politics, including the Spitalfields Act of 1774, which fixed wage rates in London and abolished the tariffs on imported silks. They walked untrodden paths, introducing the first power loom in 1900, paving the way in the British silk industry.
All elements of production remain in-house. From cut, tip making, stitching and finishing, the full sequence is assembled by the same specialist.