SWAINE ADENEY BRIGG
Traditional men''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''s accessories
Since 1893, Swaine adeney brigg has provided umbrellas to the British royal family. Reflecting the classic British style and quality, its umbrella is handmade from fine materials and equipped with solid wood handles.
Leather goods and leather briefcases are only made of horse leather, and only three companies in the world still supply horse rein leather of this quality.
Specializing in umbrella production since 1893
Churchill Prince Charles Zeng Jin is also a big fan of this brand
Churchill Umbrella
SWAINE ADENEY BRIGG
Brigg Collection
Malacca Flask
BRIGG Malacca flask umbrella
Umbrella diameter size 25 26 27 inch optional
With umbrella handle length 36 37 38 inches
Support custom lettering 10 letters up to 20 pounds cost one letter
Production cycle 3-6 weeks
Support silk umbrella cloth optional +330 pounds
Add Engraving? (£20 a letter, max 10 letters)
This item will be tailor made for you to order and will be dispatched within approximately 3-6 weeks.
This quirky and luxurious Brigg umbrella design features a Malacca cane two-piece handle with a fitted screw-in drinking flask.
Two-piece umbrella with a Tulip wood shaft, a silver plated fitting, black nylon or hand woven silk canopy and a 25" or 27" rib frame of high tensile strength.
This peculiar luxury Brig umbrella is designed with a Malacca cane two-piece handle, one with a screw-type drinking water bottle.
Two-piece umbrella, wooden tulip shaft, silver-plated accessories, black nylon or hand-woven silk canopy and 25“, 26“Or 27”Ribbed high tensile strength frame.
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Nylon umbrella cloth
Hand-made from two wooden boards. Screw-in glass flask wooden shaft can be used in 25“Or 27”, This is the size of the ribs. A total length of 25“The curve from the top of the handle down to the tip is 35.5”The overall length of 27“From the curve of the-part of the handle, down to the tip 38”Canopy can be silk or nylon
Swaine Adeney History
In the year 1750, John Ross founded a Whip making business at 238 Piccadilly, London W1.
James Swaine later purchased this business in 1798, having for some years been foreman of a successful whip making business in Holborn.
A royal appointment to His Majesty King George III and to his sons, The Prince of Wales and the Dukes of York, Clarence, Kent, Cumberland and Cambridge quickly followed and Swaine Adeney’s reputation for quality and excellence was established.
The Royal appointments were renewed in the reigns of His Majesty George IV and His Majesty William IV. In the year 1835, James Swaine moved his business to larger premises at 185 Piccadilly. The business continued to flourish and in 1845 Edward Swaine took his nephew into partnership and Swaine Adeney was born.
In many ways, much remains the same today, the same artisan’s crafts are used to hand-shape the fine leather goods: tooling, stitching and engraving each piece in time-honoured tradition.
The Swaine Adeney workshops in Cambridgeshire and Norfolk are (alas) one of the UK’s last studios left in the UK to craft fine leather in this way. This is where customers can send their favourite pieces for repair, however old!
In 1851, Swaine Adeney decided to put its fine products on show to the world at the London Exhibition held at the newly constructed Crystal Palace. The Exhibition was the largest the world had ever seen (attracting over six million visitors to a space four times the size of St. Peter’s in Rome).
Swaine Adeney won several prize medals at the London Exhibition, prompting the company to show its fine goods at the Paris Exhibition of 1900 (at which further medals followed). Swaine Adeney’s reputation was now growing on a worldwide stage, as the finest producer of leather goods.
Thomas Brigg and Son’s was established in 1836 at No. 23 St. James’s Street a stone’s throw from Swaine Adeney Brigg’s present location. The company specialised in the manufacture of the finest umbrellas, walking sticks and hunting crops.