I think that Leonard Logsdail’s post is very important because it tells us all that we need to know as to whether our bespoke days are numbered. Or not. : his own son is entering the business.
Would he let his son enter a business that was a dead end?? No. (Although he adds an important caveat which we’ll get to below)
Now , Len is passing on his skills and client book to his son. And that is a very common practice among craftsmen.
I can at the top of my head think of maybe 5-10 fathers who are passing on their tailoring craft/business to their children/relatives. Count along with me....
-John and Steven Hitchcock.
-Edwin and Matthew and Christopher DeBoise
-Leonard Logsdaile and son
-Ambrosi
-Solito
-A.Caraceni
-Tommy&Guilio Caraceni
-Rubinacci
-Kiton/Atollini/Isaia
Lots of Italians for sure....
I am sure that there are others that I can’t think of. Family run businesses ....
And equally important: who and where are the future customers. ??
Again, I think that it is a generational thing. Partially, at least.
I got into bespoke through my father many, many years ago when I was a teenager.
My first tailor, was his tailor.
It stuck with me, yes, intermittently, sporadically, over the years , but here I am today writing on LL. It’s sort of interesting.
So bespoke and tailoring is something nice. Like dining in a simple, old restaurant where your father and grandfather dined. The food may be good. Or not so good. But you go. It’s maybe a little bit of heritage....who knows.? I would guess that we all go for different reasons. Maybe it’s not even all about clothes. Anyway ...
How many of you started out with bespoke through father’s or relatives or friends.??
Each generation brings new clients and new tailors.
Yet I’m guessing that at least some bespoke demand gets passed along to families of bespoke tailors through generations of bespoke customers.
Tailoring will be sticking around for a long time. My thought.
Now consider what L. Logsdail writes in his final paragraph above.
He writes that there will always be a business for this end of the trade.
But he asks : will there still be tailors in 20 years in NYC - I.e., the men and women who do the actual hand sewing of the garments ?? Perhaps the answer to that is : no.
At least in bespoke centers where skilled tailors are already hard to find and expensive to employ like London and NYC and Paris.
I suspect though that skilled tailors will always be available and accessible in Italy. And points East as well.
And then Len adds that at least his son will have the experience and training to properly fit MTM if it comes to that, I.e., if the handwork tailors are no longer available in NYC for full bespoke with all of the attendant hand work.... and bespoke there fades away as a result.
Very interesting.
Is Len describing the future?: that the lack of skilled tailors and seamstresses - not cutters, not small bespoke enterprises, not clients - but tailors, will subvert hand sewn bespoke clothing??
...and that the future lies in hand cut, but machine sewn MTM. ?? ..
.. in other words, machines replace the human hand stitching , padding, collars, button holes... all needed to put together a hand cut garment?
Yes, I think that that is what Len is saying and with the little I know about the business, I would agree with that.
I know that if I were personally starting out today, and needed to quickly acquire a nice wardrobe, yet wanted to select the cloth that appeals to me, have my measurements taken to adjust for my specific physical anomalies, I would choose MTM, not bespoke.
I could have a beautiful suit made up for me in 6 weeks rather than 6 months, all the while selecting the most beautiful cloth of my choice and have my dropped shoulder corrected for by an expert cutter, who will later fit my MTM suit. Why not MTM ?
This is called Semi-Bespoke. It is tailored clothing, hand cut , tailor fitted, but machine sewn. At least that is what I understand it to be.
In this regard, Steed’s website describing their MTM program is very interesting.
And certainly , the bespoke clothes coming out of Edwin DeBoise & Sons shop are superb.
http://steed.co.uk/made-to-measure/
At starting prices for a 3 piece suit of US$1,800– that is extraordinary value, particularly after noting Hectorm’s shocking report on RTW prices.
I am sorely tempted to give Edwin a call when I am next in London and try out his MTM program rather than his bespoke.
And I expect that I would be very pleasantly surprised.