Cut, Hold, Release: How the First Layer Was Built
A look into the process behind the Jacob C. Scott underwear line. Precision cuts, controlled production, and intentional design.
Nothing in this collection was rushed.
It couldn’t be.
Because when something sits this close to the body, there’s nowhere to hide mistakes.
The process started with proportion.
Where does a line sit so it feels intentional instead of arbitrary?
How much tension is enough to hold without restricting?
Where does fabric need to disappear, and where does it need to stay?
These questions shaped everything.
Each silhouette went through iteration after iteration.
Pulled tighter. Released slightly. Raised. Lowered. Adjusted by millimeters, not inches.
Because a shift that small changes everything.
The way it sits on the hip.
The way it frames the body.
The way it feels when you move.
Fabric was chosen the same way.
Not just for softness, but for response.
How it reacts to tension. How it holds shape. How it returns after movement. How it feels after hours, not just seconds.
It had to live with the body, not just sit on it.
This is not oversized production.
Each run is controlled. Each size is cut with intention. Each piece is part of a specific moment in the evolution of the collection.
Once it’s gone, it doesn’t come back the same way.
The process is quiet.
But the result isn’t.