Acquire a piece of History
The first
retailors were suitmakers, who would conveniently stock and recut or re-tailor
garments. Over 150 plus years ago this previously time consuming practice of
making suits one at a time was greatly replaced with the new retailors and men's
stores. This satisfied the expanding middle class with reasonable product and
service. The term retailor in effect had come from the word “tailor”. In the
start of the industrial era, the locomotive catapulted manufacturing by
distributing and hence created greater need for production in England and
Europe.
Tailors shops then would expertly take off
jacket backs, sleeves and often the collar off to balance a garment. Today salesmen
innocently button up customer’s jackets by rote to make the garment look
better, but not understanding the fact that the jacket needs to be balanced, so
it closes creating a proper silhouette.
The rise of employment in the industry was apparent three times 400 years that has
been instrumental in building the middle class. The first time was at Saville
row when London was the worlds largest city. Then during the American depression
when coal miners took a job in their new suit, prospecting clients, measuring
and selling the outcome. The third time was in the 1960’s when U.S
manufacturing and retail MTM was at it’s heyday, before outsourcing overseas depleted
90% of its jobs in the 1990’s. Unfortunately the easy part seemed to be
measuring when the standards of fit were low. Order takers had various degrees
of success with their measurements and guesswork. The success rate would vary
for them because measurements do not account for shape.
The retail practice of marking up and
selling on sale and thereby charging for alterations has lowered standards and men’s
expectations of tailoring service and ultimately in the last 40 years and made
the suit a much less popular value today. The perception of alterations as tailoring
is an indication of modern cultures opportunities to revive my craft not
through sewing, but through cutting and designing, a much more fun practice and
business. When men realize that quality and classic style is painlessly
available they will embrace their tailoring designer and with experience see
the sea of misfits. The will embrace authentic tailoring as anti-fashion because
it has substance because of its looks that last. Fine tailoring is about client
confidence from support. It is not feminine and exocentric as is fashion, but
personal and egocentric.
Ideally fine tailoring, is human in its
integrating the upper and lower torso in a dramatic silhouette, without
buttoning, that is sartorial completion and suggests a man’s prime. This is not
about fashion but about the acquisition of a gentlemen’s piece of history, his balance
of his character with the practice of some class. This is one of the few new–old values in the
21st C. that can change a man’s world and even maybe with web
training from this site, bring home
historic employment to the local tailor with our brave new tailoring-designer.
www.samsonwardrobes.com
www.tailoringdesigner.com
www.samsonwardrobes.com
www.tailoringdesigner.com
