Replacing prison uniforms with custom suits

Custom suits at Bindle & Keep, which has made suits for about 50 exonerees since its partnership with the Innocence Project began in 2016, in New York, May 16, 2024. Bindle & Keep offers free formal wear to newly exonerated men and women trying to rebuild their lives. [Isabelle Zhao/The New York Times]

Prison limits self-expression. Inmates are usually forced to identify as a number and, for the most part, can only wear a standard-issue uniform.

After living that way for decades, how do you rekindle a sense of personal style?

Six exonerees involved with the Innocence Project, which works to overturn wrongful convictions using scientific methods like DNA, recently tried to answer that question with help from employees at Bindle & Keep, a suit maker in Brooklyn.

On a windy day in mid-May, four men and two women whose convictions were overturned in the last year made their way to Bindle & Keep's studio near the Brooklyn Navy Yard, where they tried on sample garments, selected fabrics and were meticulously measured for custom suits.

"I'm going to be cleaner than the board of health," Renay Lynch, 68, said after seeing her reflection in a navy velvet tuxedo...

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