Thu Oct 04, 2007 10:50 pm
Further to the fit/finish debate, and to the role of national 'schools,' I'd suppose that excellent finishers, like excellent cutters and coatmakers, are a scarce resource, and that firms with access to them no doubt deploy them where they will be most appreciated. I'm persuaded of this by a couple of experiences; it's a part of the education of a bespoke client that I value. At the initial measuring-up and order-taking for my first suit from a certain SR piscina, I mentioned that in addition to a particular approach to silhouette and drape I very much hoped to approach the quality of the beautiful buttonhole stitching on my first SR coat, made in '84. The cutters noted this on the order sheet and said something to the effect of "Ah, then we'll send it to XXXXXXX. She's the best." I think mention may have been made of her country of origin, central European I think. And indeed the completed buttonhole work was all I could hope for, with some subtleties I would never have thought of. But I have seen buttonholes and other finishing from the same firm that was only adequate. So I've learned it pays to make one's appreciation known at the outset.
This leads to a question. I'm hoping to have a suit made before long by the distinguished Philadelphia tailor Joseph Centofanti (now 87) before he hangs up his shears. The man is an artist at sculpting cloth, but all the buttonhole work I've seen from his shop is underwhelming. This will not stop me from working with him, and once I've made known my hope that he will provide the best finishing he can, I'll take what I get. Manton mentioned to me once that he knows someone in the New York area who can do exquisite buttonholes on completed garments, and I'd love for Centofanti's work to have a finish worthy of it. Of course it would be insulting to ask him to leave the buttonholes uncut (even though he himself might wish he had access to better finishers; I don't know). My question is, from a technical standpoint, on a 10-12 oz. sharkskin (Charles Clayton), for example, once buttonholes have been stitched, can the stitching successfully be removed if one wanted to have them re-bound more finely and evenly? Or would the cloth edges be too compromised to properly hold new stitches without cockling or losing the ability to meet squarely, etc?
Contrary to what my question may suggest, I'm not a fanatic about buttonholes; line, fit, and movement are all much more important to me. But fine finishing is one of the pleasures of bespoke, and as we often seek out specialists, I thought I'd canvass your thoughts on the plausibility of such a course.