Become a bespoke tailor?

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A bespoke tailor creates custom clothing based on a client’s unique measurements and requests, and it takes years of training to become one. Tailored clothing is made from scratch using raw fabrics and can be expensive. In England, there are trade industry requirements to become a bespoke tailor, and success is based on the quality of one’s work.

A bespoke tailor is a professional who makes custom clothing based on a client’s unique measurements and requests. This differs from more common tailoring, in which ready-to-wear clothing is altered, within limitations, to achieve a better fit, as well as tailored clothing that is cut from standard patterns. It often takes years of apprenticeship and training to become a bespoke tailor, and even then success is not guaranteed.

In most cases, future tailors receive professional training from a relatively early age. Especially gifted students can sign up with a handkerchief early on to become a bespoke tailor, but most only achieve this status through years of working doing alterations and other less prestigious jobs, at which point they may try to move on to a job personalized. Bespoke tailors are comparatively rare and specialized groups of professionals.

One of the hallmarks of tailored clothing is its construction from scratch using raw fabrics. The term is most commonly applied to suits, but anything made from scratch is considered bespoke. A customer determines the material he wants along with specifications, such as cuffs and pleats, and the tailor makes the product by hand from large sheets of fabric.

This type of clothing can be very expensive. One of the keys to becoming a bespoke tailor is understanding a client’s exact wishes and being able to successfully translate them into a finished product. This is not always as simple as taking the design specifications presented and making the clothing that meets them. A tailor often must interpret what a client wants and create clothing with original touches that enhance the original sketch.

In England and several other countries, there are trade industry requirements that must be met in order for an individual to become and market themselves as a bespoke tailor. For example, a group of high-end tailors known as the Savile Row Bespoke Association in London set out a set of standards required for clothing to display their trademark. Among its requirements are participation in an approved training program, customer consultation services and a minimum level of manual labor for much of the clothing sold.

Tailored garments are not always quality products. Just like chefs, mechanics, and other similar professions, not all bespoke tailors are created equal. Success is based on the merits of one’s work, and those who excel at making scratch-off clothing see their business expand and are able to command higher prices.




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