Isn't this a question that you asked when you started this thread? And then wondered aloud why you weren't getting responses:Senator Jack said:Hate to be a jerk, but if one is a modern-bespoke-super-150-kind-of-cut-right-but-not-really style aficianado, there are a lot of other suit forums that may be more appropriate for posting. I found, and joined, the lounge because I read posts that made me say, 'Finally. a couple of guys who know what they're talking about.' (Matt D, Baron K, Marc C, to name a few). I'd hate to see the lounge become another repository for sartorial old wives' tales. It's because it isn't that people come here.
Still have yet to hear from a few of the fellas that post quite a bit about suits. Curious.
So why get annoyed when you get the responses you claimed to be seeking?
If the rest of what you wrote is supposed to include me, I don't like Supers and never have. I have posted several times on the Lounge in reponse to people seeking vintage quality and vintage weight cloth made today, which is what I prefer. There are still a few producers who make it, and one even got back into the game recently, which I think is a positive trend.
As to make, undoubtedly the quality level of vintage suits is overall much higher. There are any number of reaons for that. But there are a handful of makers today who can sew a suit every bit as well as the tailors of the vintage era.
As to cut, I think the best techiniques translate well across the decades. The best tailors know those techniques. I don't think any of the secrets of the vintage era have been permanently lost. It would be nice if more cutters and expecially RTW makers relearned them. But if one is a little patient, one can find a tailor, and some cloth, to make what is in all important respects a vintage suit in 2007.
One more point: fluidity of movement is not just a matter of small armholes. Fred Astaire-like freedom of movement also requires a lot of fullness over the shoulder blades and significant drape in the chest. That in turn can look sloppy or baggy to some; though some of us like the look very much. But a clean chest and freedom of movement are often at odds, and if one likes both, one has to make a compromise somewhere.