Sun Sep 30, 2007 3:07 pm
Mr. Giani
My approach to proving you are not a bespoke tailor is different than that of the rest of members that have asked you until now. I myself am young and inexperienced, and thus I need to be very careful with the clothes I purchase. As I do not have enough knowledge, I believe, to prove you are not a bespoke artisan, I use here questions that work more by logic than by knowledge.
1. Are the garments you sell fully hand stitched? Is there full craftsmanship in your production? (I know these are primary obvious questions but in reality if I were to find out if a man is trying to sell me a suit as bespoke without it being the case, this is what I would ask. this question doesn't prove totally anything, but it gives a line to start making an idea of the truth)
2. Can you produce for me a garment, let say a jacket, which shares nothing with any other garment you have ever created? (Another obvious question, and also another great question to find out the truth in your use of the term 'bespoke'. although it might be the case that your answer to the question is positive and you are not a bespoke artisan, it is most probable that you are)
3. If I ask you to make for me a double-breasted 6x2 frock coat in Barathea 14 Oz weave from H Lesser, lengthed just to the bottom of the knee, with minimum shoulder padding, medium-width separately-cut lapels with grosgrain facings, small armholes, low waist seam, no outer pockets, could you do it with out it looking like a theatre or film costume but being completely adequate for any occasion it would be required back then, say, a day meeting for the treaty of Versailles? If you could you would enter a reduced list of the best bespoke tailors worldwide, including Knize and Rubinnaci.
4. From your comments regarding monarchs and aristocrats, I suppose they are your common clients. And you make special garments for them which are sometimes unique, as it could be any costume of any asian or african monarch/leader. Those garments might satisfy points 1 and 2, but that doesn't make you bespoke: it makes you a 'custom' tailor, who produces garments to request. Custom is not the same as bespoke. And I think that with this statement, I've come to the point that can lead to achieving the purpose of this thread.
PS: Mr. Alden, this thread is a great idea, thanks for it.