
Reserved’s The Office Edit, fronted by Robbie Wadge, sets out a simple proposition. The office uniform has shifted from rigidity to range. Here, tailoring adapts when hierarchy gives way to mixed dress codes.
Reserved The Office Edit

The Reserved lineup builds on familiar anchors, ranging from navy suiting and checked blazers to collared shirts, but cuts them with ease. For example, a blazer paired with chinos creates continuity between desk and evening.

Meanwhile, lightweight suits worn with plain tees keep tailoring active across climates and hours. Even the blazer-and-shorts pairing, a sharp gesture, reads as a modern study of how far the office dress line can stretch.

This style spectrum answers a workplace climate that resists fixed rules. Reserved positions business casual as a system of fluency, where garments maintain their form while adapting to context.

Culturally, The Office Edit belongs to the same lineage that once swapped Silicon Valley’s khakis for open collars. Today, that instinct surfaces in unstructured jackets and trousers cut for movement. Reserved is less interested in breaking from office codes than in redrawing them, creating a language of professionalism that thrives on flexibility.







