The jumper that tries too hard is easy to spot. It has too much going on at the chest, or a logo doing work the design cannot, or it’s cut in a way that makes layering impossible. Most men have bought one. Most men have stopped wearing it within a season. What we’ve been looking for here is the opposite of that. Jumpers with quiet confidence. The kind that look right whether you’re wearing them over a shirt collar or with a plain white tee, dressed up or left to do the heavy lifting on a weekend. Midweight knits that don’t bobble after three washes. Colours you can actually build around. Cuts that work for a range of builds without leaning on stretch to get there. We’ve been particularly drawn to merino and lambswool pieces that improve with wear rather than deteriorating into shapeless disappointment. A great jumper should not announce itself. It should just make everything else look more considered.