bond_and_beyond wrote:
But I still hold that the process that shirts through at for example Budd or T&A deserve to be called bespoke as opposed to MTM.
I had the same certainty for more than 20 years until recently, when I started exchanging notes with some purists who only consider it
bespoke provided the shirt is hand-made by a single artisan (or some small variation on this theme).
To tell you the truth, I'm more interested in fit and quality than in name and process.
From the mid 70s into the early 90s I dealt with several shirtmakers in a few countries. Patterns were cut for me and a fitting process ensued. Some shirts had extensive hand work, some had very little. I just called those shirts, and their makers called them too:
custom-made in the US and Hong Kong, and "
a la medida" in Spanish speaking countries.
In the 90s came my initiation to Jermyn Street. Budd called them
bespoke, but despite Mr. Butcher's superb detachable collars, they were machine sewn by a seamstress. Turnbull & Asser also called them
bespoke but they charged me extra if I wanted hand-finished buttonholes, for instance.
Later, in Italy, nobody -hand work or not- called my shirts
bespoke, just "su misura".
Is a shirt whose sleeves are set by hand noticeable more confortable than when it's machine sewn? I cannot really tell as I can tell about my jackets. Is a hand-made shirt more beautiful? I would say yes, maybe. But of course, all this depends on the craftsmanship of the shirtmaker. Bespoke or MTM, the name really doesn't matter.