A Super 120 fabric book laid out with multiple fabric swatches to choose from to match your style profile.

Super 120 vs Super 150 Wool: What the Numbers Mean and Which Fabric Is Right for You

May 17, 20265 min read

The numbers on wool fabric labels refer to the fineness of the wool fibre. The higher the number, the finer the fibre. Finer fibres produce a smoother, lighter fabric with a more refined drape. They also require more care and tend to be less durable under heavy daily use than coarser wools.

Understanding the difference helps you choose the right fabric for how you actually wear the suit, not just for how it feels in the appointment.

What the Super Rating Means

In practical terms: Super 120 fibres are finer than standard wool but coarser than Super 150. Super 150 is exceptionally fine, with a cashmere-like softness and drape.

Both are significantly finer than the wool blends and lower-grade wools used in department store suits. Both produce garments that look, feel, and drape measurably better than entry-level fabrics.

Super 120 Wool: The Professional’s Workhorse

Super 120 is the right choice for most professional men who wear suits regularly.

It is fine enough to drape well and look refined. It holds its shape through a full workday. It can be worn two to three times per week with proper rotation and care without showing wear prematurely. It is appropriate across all professional contexts, from business casual environments to formal client-facing settings.

At Cardero, Super 120 wool suits start at $1,299. For a man who wears suits weekly and wants a garment that performs reliably over years, Super 120 delivers the right combination of quality and durability.

Super 150 Wool: The Event and Statement Fabric

Super 150 is softer and more luxurious to the touch than Super 120. The drape is more fluid. In the right lighting, the fabric has a subtle sheen that communicates quality to anyone who knows what they are looking at.

The tradeoff is durability. Finer fibres are more susceptible to abrasion, pilling, and wear under daily use. A Super 150 suit worn three times per week will show wear faster than a Super 120 in the same rotation.

Super 150 is the right choice for men who are building a wardrobe and want one suit at a higher register, worn for specific occasions: important presentations, formal events, black-tie environments, or any setting where the quality of the fabric communicates something specific. It is not the right choice for a daily driver suit.

At Cardero, Super 150 wool suits start at $1,699.

The Practical Decision Matrix

If you are buying your first custom suit and will wear it regularly: Super 120.

If you already have a working suit wardrobe and want to add a garment at a higher register: Super 150.

If you need a suit for a specific important event and will wear it regularly afterward: Super 120 is the more practical investment.

If you are building the Professional or Full Capsule wardrobe at Cardero, the mix is typically Super 120 and Super 150 at different tiers of the wardrobe. The daily-wear suits in Super 120. The event suits and statement pieces in Super 150.

What About the Wool Blend?

The wool blend at Cardero starts at $899. It is the entry point and serves the occasional wearer or the man building his first suit.

The difference between wool blend and Super 120 is meaningful in drape, breathability, and how the garment holds its shape over time. For a man who wears suits regularly, Super 120 is worth the $400 difference. For a man who wears a suit fewer than 10 times per year, the wool blend is a sensible choice.

Fabric Conversation at the Appointment

The fabric decision is made during the design session at your Cardero appointment. You handle the samples, discuss the use case, and make the choice with guidance from someone who knows how these fabrics perform over time and who has no financial incentive toward any particular option.

Book a free appointment at book.carderoclothing.com.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Super 120 or Super 150 mean on a wool suit?

The number refers to the fineness of the wool fibre. The higher the number, the finer the fibre. Finer fibres produce a smoother, lighter fabric with a more refined drape. Super 120 and Super 150 are both significantly finer than the wool used in most department store suits.

What is the difference between Super 120 and Super 150 wool?

Super 120 is finer than standard wool and holds its shape well under regular wear. Super 150 is softer, more fluid in drape, and has a subtle sheen that communicates quality — but it is more susceptible to wear under frequent use. Super 120 is built for regular professional use. Super 150 is built for specific occasions and higher-register events.

Which wool should I choose for my first custom suit?

Super 120 is the right choice for most men buying their first custom suit. It performs reliably across years of regular wear, breathes well, and looks correct in every professional setting. Super 150 is better suited to a second or third suit where you want one garment at a higher formality register.

How much do Super 120 and Super 150 suits cost at Cardero?

A Super 120 wool suit starts at $1,299. A Super 150 wool suit starts at $1,699. The entry-level wool blend starts at $899 and is a practical choice for occasional wear or a first custom suit on a tighter budget.

Is Super 150 worth the extra cost?

For men who wear suits daily, Super 120 is the better long-term investment because it holds up better under frequent rotation. Super 150 is worth the cost when you already have working suits and want one garment at a higher register — for important presentations, formal events, or black-tie occasions where fabric quality is noticed.

Derek is the Owner & Founder of Cardero Clothing.

Derek Burbidge

Derek is the Owner & Founder of Cardero Clothing.

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