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QUALITY
With the transformation of the mens suit business into a world of designer
fashion and the almost complete mechanization of its manufacturing process,
determining the contemporary suit?s quality and intrinsic value is the most
elusive challenge facing today?s shopper.
Like women?s ready-to-wear, the majority of mens tailored clothing today is
sold on its name recognition, fit, and aura of fashionability.
The era when mens suits were expected to carry a man from one decade to
another and were purveyed based on the relative merits of their quality and hand
tailoring is as dated as sized hosiery, exact-sleeved dress shirts, and the
three-piece suit.
Except for a handful of factories left in the world that continue to tailor
suit primarily by hand, most clothing manufacturers have either incorporated the
latest technology into their production process or closed shop.
The cost of skilled labor and the time required to create a garment in the
old-world manner has limited this wearable market to those retailers and
consumers who appreciate the quality and work behind the hand-stitched garments
higher price.
In his hallowed fitting rooms the specialty retailer must be able to explain
the nuances of this handcrafted creation from its silk thread and hand made
buttonholes to the superiority of its worsted fabric.
Beginning in the 1920s, before machine started replacing tailors, suits were
grads from 1 to 6 in a system that specified the number of hand operations used
to create the final product.
For instance, a number 1, the lowest grade of suit, was almost entirely
machine-made.
A number 2 coat could use some handwork to finish the cuffs, collar, and
buttons.
A number 3 ha to have these three components finished by hand.
. A number 6, the highest grade on the scale, was made almost entirely by
hand. Of course, some manufacturers would misrepresent these numbers in an
attempt to sell their product at a higher quality rating it deserved, but at
least the system gave the retailer and consumer some sort of uniform
standard.
As technical improvement in machine-made clothes blurred the advantages of
more costly hand crafting, tailored clothes have become creations of refined
engineering and industrialized production.
With the tailors shears and hand-sewn stitches being replaced by computers,
laser knives, conveyor belts, fusing, and high-speed pressing machinery, the
modern mens suit has become a marvel of tailoring science and technological
genius.
And as with any automates creation, the measure of its quality is time, in
this case minutes.
The modern suit that sells for $395 takes approximately 80 minutes of
uninterrupted labor, while the higher-profile designer garment retailing for
$1,495 requires approximately 150 minutes of continuous construction.
In order words, little more than an hour of actual labor and quality control
separate the least costly from the most expensive machine-made suit.
While the higher-prices suits shell fabric, linings, facings, and fusibles
are more costly and produce a softer, more flexible garment, they do not account
for the entire difference in retail price.
A good part of the disparity represents the expenses involved in operating a
high-profile designer fashion business; publicity, advertising, fashion shows,
and the overhead of a design studio.
Today, most mens suits are constructed in the same manner as a dress shirts
collars and cuffs, whose outside layers are top-fused for permanent smoothness.
First developed during the 1950s, the process of bonding or gluing a layer to
an outside shell fabric has evolved to a level where it can nearly simulate the
softness and flexibility of the hand-sewn canvas used in tailored mens clothes.
Formerly, this layer of reinforcement places between the coats outer cloth
and inner lining consisted of one or more ply of horsehair and regular canvas
secured by numerous hand stitches.
When suspended by the elasticity of its hand make silk stitches, its
free-floating dynamic gave the jackets front a lasting shapeliness and drape
while lending pliancy and spring to the roll of its lapel.
The scientific advances seen in the development and performance of the more
traditional artisan methods.
With the consumer requesting lighter, softer tailored clothing, these
fusibles allow a cost to mold to the wearer, though they sacrifice fit and
longevity in the process.
So, how does a man cut through all this industry mumbo jumbo to determine his
prospective suits level of quality The answer is complex and difficult to
translate into the written word, since these automated garments lack the visible
handwork of top quality tailoring to act as benchmarks.
The cost efficiency of the new technology encourages manufacturers to
incorporate many of the details associated with more expensive tailored clothed
into less costly products, rendering the ranking of quality even less clear.
Crotch pieces and lines knees are no longer the exclusive province of the
most expensively tailored suit trousers, while underarm sweat shields and
machine stitching that appears hand-sewn grace jackets with less than lofty
pedigree.
I will break down the subject into price brackets that represent various
generic methods of manufacture so our investigation will have some boundaries
and focus.
Please remember that this is a discussion about the quality of the products
construction, not the beauty of its design.
As you will learn later, a wearable longevity is predicated more on its
design than its quality.
A well-designed $350 suit can provide more years of wear than an expensive
hand-tailored worsted cashmere suit whose shoulders look as though the hanger is
still holding them up.
The finest ready-made suits are constructed like those that are custom-made,
except the workplace has been organized into a miniature factory.
This means each garment is individually hand-cut, lining, pocket, and sleeves
have all been sewn by hand; and everything is hand-pressed.
At this level of quality, the construction or padding of the jackets lapels
and collar is stitched totally by hand.
There could be two thousand stitches or more in a single-breasted jackets
lapel; these will hold the garments shape intact through all weathers, fair or
foul.
For this rarefied ready-made suit, one must expect to pay at least
&2,000.
The next ministep below this level of quality can boast the same level of
workmanship, but the time-consuming lapel hand-basting is done by a special
machine.
Those parts of the coat that need flexibility and movement continue to be
sewn by hand - armholes, shoulders, collar.
At a minimum, you should be able to look at the inside of the jacket and
confirm that the felling of its linings in these areas in hand done.
Next, you should take the coats bottom front, three inches from its bottom
and two inches from its edge.
Rub it between the coats outer shell and inner lining. This confirms the
coat has a canvas front rather than a fused one.
It is the work of a tailor and the garments shape will remain intact as long
as it is well cared for. Selling for between $1,500 and $2,000, it will endure
the ravages of extended wear.
Moving down to he next level of quality, you find the semitraditional or
semi-canvas-front coat whose bottom front is fused but not its lapels, collar,
and chest.
Its canvas inner lining floats, held in place by hand stitches so it moves
more naturally with the coat. The beauty of this hybrid is that its lapels roll
and stay on the coats chest more naturally than fused lapels will.
The canvas inner lining gives the lapels more spring so that their edges
remain in contact with the jackets chest.
One can always tell a fused lapel because its edges tend to curl away from
the jacket.
The semitraditional make has its shoulders, armholes, and collar
hand-stitched so that the presentation around the mans face and upper torso
appears supple and rich.
The cost for such a suit usually falls between $850 and $1,200.
The majority of todays tailored clothing is sewn completely by machine and
constructed through fusing.
One version is made open or in what we call the American system.
Parts such as the sleeve and collars are assembled separately first, then put
together.
In the Two-shell or German system, the entire inside lining shell is
assembled separately from the outside fabric shell.
Then the one is sewn inside the other, The two-shell calls for less labor and
prides itself on its consistency.
While requiring additional manufacturing steps, the American system utilizes
more basting stitches, elements of make that in the end come out of the coat but
help build in its enduring shape.
The price of this type of garment can range wildly, from $395 up to $1,495
depending on whose label is inside
The only thing one needs to consider when making a choice between the least
expensive methods of tailoring is alterability.
Most men would never even consider this factor, but they must. Since the
two-shell garment only has 3/8? Outlet in its seams, the man who gains ten
pounds or more will find it impossible to have the coat let out.
Imagine spending $750 on a suit only to find out it cannot be altered the
garment made in the traditional open way because its shape comes from building
in curves while the engineered coat?s shape, due to its flat, straight-lined
approach to make, will lose its shapeliness faster.
In conclusion, I would like to remind you that the aforementioned has been
written as a general guide.
Within each of these categories, you will encounter garments that resist easy
classification.
I hope the information passed on here will enable you to ask the correct
questions when trying to get a grip on this difficult subject.
Email info@embassyfashion.com
or kevin@embassyfashion.com for more
information and or confirmation of offer
acceptance.
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