At times, the Row is eerily quiet. Much of the foot-traffic is from Londoners using it as a shortcut to, or from, Bond Street. It shouldn’t be this way—this is one of the most historic and influential style addresses on earth, where the rule book was written, torn up, rewritten again, and is being adapted to suit modern needs (women’s tailor The Deck are now present on Savile Row). Tourists ought to be adding the street to their itineraries, snapping the quaint, mannequin-lined shop-windows on their cameras, and plunging into this unapologetically classic corner of London. This is what The Service is doing. It gives you a reason to go and hang out on Savile Row; because unless you’re shopping, you’ll simply be passing through. Or, as many tourists and Londoners admit, building up enough courage to actually step into one of the small, traditional houses.