Scot wrote:For the aspirations of most LL members to be fulfilled, though, surely style and substance must come together!
Precisely my idea, Scot. I just added to it the notion that, if both are present in a garment (as they should), it is tailoring that must follow style and not vice versa. In other words, first a decision is made (by the cutter, the designer, the client - whoever it is that styles the garment) on what the planned piece of clothing is to look like, what kind of image it should convey. Then it is the job of the actual maker (tailor) to ensure that it comes out as planned.
I don't like the idea of a tailor deciding to amend the design of a coat with respect to the cutter's (and customer's) plan, because he has different ideas on how clothes should fit: snug or loose, draped or lean, how long or how short, with narrower or wider lapels or higher or lower buttoning point. There are many tailoring techniques available and a good tailor should know how to choose the one that best serves the style chosen by the cutter and customer. Of course, whoever it is that plans the garment should have a good understanding of what is possible and what can be achieved given the body, the cloth, the kind of garment - so that the design is not impossible. If cutter and tailor are one and the same, I believe he should avoid letting his personal view of fit get in the way of styling the garment as the customer likes it.
We tend to speak of fit as an absolute notion, that can only manifest itself in one way with any one person - I think that is a false notion. Fit is, to a certain degree, relative to style. A body coat and a draped jacket may both fit a customer well, although they will look (and FEEL) quite differently. If well cut and tailored, both may be comfortable, although some may think the body coat as being "too tight" or the draped jacket as being "too loose" - this is a matter of style, of preference, of the image that the customer wants his clothes to convey.
There is no style without good fit, that's for sure. But well-fitting clothes with the wrong style (or none whatsoever) are by no means a better alternative. Both need to be present and, as stated before, in my view the leading force is style, while good tailoring should follow it and give it the best expression.