Holland & Holland’s house tweed merges centuries of gunmaking mastery with modern design to offer luxury fieldwear for sports enthusiasts.
One of Britain’s most storied gunmakers, Holland & Holland, has taken a notable step in extending its heritage into clothing. The company has unveiled its first House Tweed, a fabric designed not as a decorative afterthought, but as a direct expression of the same craft and care that goes into its firearms.
Drawing on Nearly 200 Years of Experience
Since 1835, Holland & Holland has built a reputation for exceptional shotguns and rifles. With this new tweed, the company adds a tactile layer to its legacy, something to wear that carries the same DNA as its guns.
Every thread tells a story. The tweed’s colour palette is based on materials found in their firearms: the rich brown of walnut wood, the deep metallic sheen of case-hardened steel, gold inlays, and the brand’s distinctive green. These tones have been deliberately woven in, not for show, but to reflect the character of the brand’s long-standing craftsmanship.
Scotland’s Lovat Mill Brings the Idea to Life
To realise the project, Holland & Holland worked with Lovat Mill in Scotland, a name known for high-quality tweeds and traditional weaving methods. This partnership wasn’t just about finding a capable supplier; it was about working with someone who understood what the fabric needed to represent.
The result is a textile that’s both practical and refined, hardwearing enough for days in the field, but cut with the same eye for detail expected from any luxury garment.
Clothing with Purpose
The tweed features across several of the brand’s clothing lines, Northwood, Harrow, and Highgrove among them. The garments themselves are designed with field use in mind: coats, vests, breeks, trousers, even accessories like flat caps and skirts. Every piece is built to be worn, not just admired.
Durability is key. Holland & Holland describes the collection as having “an exceptional pedigree and a timeless longevity which will see it last, season after season”, a sentiment that aligns with the way its customers tend to view clothing: as an investment.
The Vision Behind the Cloth
The project was overseen by Emmanuel Guegan, Holland & Holland’s Clothing & Accessories Manager. Speaking about the intent behind the tweed, he explained:
“How do you convey the essence of a Holland & Holland, a fabled British handmade firearm, into its most natural and legitimate companion, the tweed garment? This was the challenge we set ourselves twenty-four months ago, morphing and weaving the hues and subtleties of our case hardening, gold inlays and deeply oiled walnut stocks into a fabric that honours the Holland & Holland legacy. Subtle yet rich, elegant yet strong; our House Tweed sets a new benchmark for sartorial elegance in the field.”
His words make it clear, this was not a quick marketing move. It was a carefully planned exercise in translating one form of craftsmanship into another.
A Collaborative Effort
Lovat Mill’s Design Director, Alan Cumming, also spoke about the partnership:
“We rarely develop a new tweed with such a rich backstory and provenance. Our vision was unanimous, a fusion of tradition, craftsmanship and artistry. This shared approach shines through in the material – perfectly soft, reliably durable, and, above all, strikingly beautiful.”
The praise reflects not just the fabric’s appearance, but the process that shaped it.
The Support of a Larger Group
Now under the Beretta Holding Groups, Holland & Holland has access to the kind of support that enables long-term projects like this. With over 50 companies in its portfolio, the group allows its members to develop ambitious ideas without rushing them to market.
Respecting the Past, Looking Ahead
This isn’t Holland & Holland turning its back on tradition. If anything, the tweed is an extension of it, designed for today’s sporting lifestyle but steeped in the same values that have guided the company for generations.
For those who buy into the brand, the tweed offers a way to wear that heritage. Not just in look, but in substance.
Where to Find It
The House Tweed range is available at Holland & Holland’s Gun Rooms, the company’s Shooting Ground in Northwood, and through its official website at www.Holland&Holland.com/house-tweed. Availability remains selective, but not inaccessible.
Looking to the Future
The success of this tweed could point to more textile innovations down the line, especially if the collaboration with Lovat Mill continues. It also shows what’s possible when two traditional British makers pool their strengths to create something new but rooted in the past.
For Holland & Holland, the House Tweed is more than a launch; it’s a quiet signal that the brand’s next chapter won’t abandon its origins, but carry them into new territory.



