NJS
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Actually, speaking strictly from a production standpoint, one could say all extant Savile Row firms are but shadows of their former selves. Whether Huntsman or Henry Poole, the number of workers employed today by an SR firm is a just a fraction of the number employed at its peak (i.e. perhaps just a tenth or even less).Bishop of Briggs wrote:That is a bit rich coming from Gieves & Hawkes. Number 1 is a shadow of its former self.
storeynicholas wrote:Let's face it, bespoke tailoring is for a much smaller market now than it has ever been...However, I would suggest that, instead of feeling obliged to push tat and just preserve the terminology of 'bespoke' for an ever-decreasing circle of clients, the industry should get up on its hind legs and get the real message across - that Savile Row was originally the best and, across the board, remains the best, for real bespoke tailoring - but they need a better copywriter than I. Part of all this trouble is caused, of course, because ill-educated money-grubbing plutocrats have replaced aristocrats and gormless 'celebrities' have supplanted professionals in their buying power - because we live in the age which panders to the tastes of the common man.
NJS
erasmus - I couldn't agree more. The fact is that SR businesses are like any other: to stand still is to die, which is one reason why there are so many fewer SR firms today than in the past.The tut-tutting of Kilgour or Gieves & Hawkes for diversifying into RTW misses a blindingly obvious business dilemma facing SR firms. If the existing customer base is declining (and has been for decades), how will you find new customers to replace the old? Conduct business as usual? I think not.
As an old managing partner used to say to me when I was a trainee back in the last century, "I understand your point dear boy, but I disagree"!it's just the way that it's done and what comes off the production line for sale
This is true, but it takes us back to the original subject of this thread. SR itself is fundamental to the SR brand, and the brand is fundamental to the survival of SR businesses. That is why they are trying to preserve and protect it. Whatever your views on whether SR should be a trade mark or not, the fact is that it is a brand of enormous value (why else would companies like Evisu, the Savile Row Tailors Guilde and Alexandre have rented expensive premises there). It still represents the epicentre of modern male elegance. At least for now. It will die out if everyone simply ups sticks and heads for the country. And if the brand dies, so, in all likelihood, will the SR firms which we all cherish.when one speaks of modernizing and budgets and cost-cutting there is always the option of moving to cheaper premises, while keeping the Savile Row credentials
I'm sure you are right Costi - it is not just a matter of survival. But if their RTW lines make firms a little more profitable then that too is a good thing in my view. Extra profits means more money to invest in the business and we can hope that some of it might be used to help recruit and train new talent.I wonder if it is really a matter of survival with SR firms using their brand names to sell RTW. It certainly does increase the turnover over a short and medium term, but is that extra turnover essential to their survival, or is it just that - "extra"?
I must say that whilst I find myself intuitively in agreement with you on this, a moment's reflection reveals what a strange thing it is to say. Tailors have no moral or ethical duty to maintain a certain image, or indeed to conduct their businesses in a particular way. And in the grand scheme of things the mere fact that a company is purveying RTW clothing is surely of profound triviality. Consider instead the high street retail chains who profit from child labour in the sweat shops of Asia, or those that use real fur sourced from animals which are literally skinned alive in the name of fashion. The fact that a few SR tailors have dared to sell clothing off the peg is laughably trivial considered in the context of these genuine issues of ethical manufacture and employment. And in any case, if you don't like the way they run their business you are free to go elsewhere!I think there is (or should be) a certain amount of pride in the name of a good bespoke clothing house with tradition.
I would not paint so stark a picture, but I agree that we should be realistic. SR is already much changed from the exclusive enclave of bespoke firms which characterised its 'golden age' (if indeed there was ever such a thing). Evisu, Alexandre, The Savoy Tailors Guild and a host of others have moved in, none of them offering true bespoke in the way we would understand it. Those firms which do still offer the real thing are trying to protect it, in some of the ways we've been debating here. I applaud them for it and I don't begrudge them their forays into RTW either.all the history and skill buried beneath boxes of cellophane-wrapped tat, sold (I believe the term is) 'on cost': big doors open and attractive young ladies tempting passers by with glasses of cavee in the perennial summer sales until the winter sales arrive - when they put on an extra layer and go back out there - with mulled wine. Is this what Savile Row wants? Is that where it is going?
The power of the brand is all pervasive, whether you like it or not, and things may not be all they seem even in the gunsmiths trade. Purdey has been owned by Richemont for 15 years, a Swiss company whose stable of luxury brands includes Cartier, Mont Blanc, Alfred Dunhill and Chloe. Holland & Holland is owned by Chanel, the French cosmetics giant, and if we are talking about spotty salesmen and their monthly targets you should vist their Bruton Street store and experience for yourself their delightful approach to customer service.Hasn't the modern age yet had enough of 'spin' and 'spin doctors'? Do we expect great gunsmiths to do the same? - They don't.
I have absolutely no problem with it at all, NJS! Indeed, if one is able to know and appreciate the best then one should be able blithely to ignore anything less, even if one has to pass it on rails and hangers on the way to the bespoke fitting room at the back of the shop. G&H, Kilgour, Huntsman and others are trying hard to remain successful, and in my view they should be supported in their endeavours.Snob? In certain respects - unhesitatingly yes. When it comes to knowing and appreciating and wanting the best, definitiely. If other people have a problem with that - it's their problem and not mine!!
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