Hey guys , I was wondering whether there are any tailors that can do repairs my suit. It has two silverfish bites that are around 3mm in diameter( left in the cupboard in Australia for too long without mothballs). I have asked around but no one seems to be able to mend the suit.
Hey guys , I was wondering whether there are any tailors that can do repairs my suit. It has two silverfish bites that are around 3mm in diameter( left in the cupboard in Australia for too long without mothballs). I have asked around but no one seems to be able to mend the suit. Thanks
Depend where the holes is...
But.... how do you think they can patch a hole?? Its nigh impossible.
ballsofsteel, you will need a very good tailor but technically it is possible.
If you look at Thomas Mahon's blog/website which is called the English Cut, you will see an example of it being done though in your case, you may need a similar fabric. Just have a look at the link I have provided below.
Thanks for the link . Yeah that is what I am looking Fr. Any ideas where I can find a tailor capable of that? I can get it done in Australia , they call it invisible mending or reweaving I think but it costs a fortune to do so
To be honest, I am not so sure.If your suit is an expensive one, it's better you get it done at a proper place.Would be quite a risk to try out a new place and ends up doing a bad job.
I can recommend you some shops but depends on your preference. If you wanted my do's and dont's list, there are 45 points in it. Too long for me to type in this forum.
I can recommend you some shops but depends on your preference. If you wanted my do's and dont's list, there are 45 points in it. Too long for me to type in this forum.
Nice. if i get the fabric from you i hope tailor won't charge a hefty price for not getting from them. So what shop you can recommend?
Guys, i've been wanting to ask this for quite some time. I'm planning to make a tuxedo for my wedding end of the year.
Understand that tuxedo's have their shiny satin material on the lapel of blazer.
Here comes the issue. Because tuxedo are stuffs that you probably wear once in your lifetime unless you're into the entertainment of glamour industry, is it possible for you to alter the satin lapel of the blazer into a normal blazer after the wedding? I plan to turn the tuxedo(minus the shiny satin lapel) into a normal suit so that i can wear them for exhibitions and/or friend's wedding. I'd try to keep some remaining material.
Question is, is it even possible to do it?
The answer is CAN. U can ask the tailor to make a reversible suit. The suit does not having lining. U can have either regular lapels or notch lapels. The drawback of such suits is u cannot make very structured shoulders because it has to be able to be worn 2 side. And such suits are a little on the heavy side. It could be warmer too. But unless u can make it without using very thinck wool, then it might be wearable. The only time i have seen a reversible suit jacket is made by Commes Des Cargons. One side is regular black dress suit jacket, and when u flip it inside out the other side is dark blue in color and has a tribal print on it. I saw it once at some bundle shop. They were asking a lot for it. You could still see some beng sold in Japan Ebay by the same brand.
The only problem now is finding a tailor that would make such a suit for you. And how much you are willing to pay for it. But u stirred my long curiosity on the question if any tailors here willing to make one. Hell such jackets exists in movies. i think the first time i saw such jacket is in Mission Impossible tv series 1970s' one. Ok time to hit the tailors for pricing and feasability.
This post has been edited by netmatrix: Jul 25 2012, 04:19 PM
The answer is CAN. U can ask the tailor to make a reversible suit. The suit does not having lining. U can have either regular lapels or notch lapels. The drawback of such suits is u cannot make very structured shoulders because it has to be able to be worn 2 side. And such suits are a little on the heavy side. It could be warmer too. But unless u can make it without using very thinck wool, then it might be wearable. The only time i have seen a reversible suit jacket is made by Commes Des Cargons. One side is regular black dress suit jacket, and when u flip it inside out the other side is dark blue in color and has a tribal print on it. I saw it once at some bundle shop. They were asking a lot for it. You could still see some beng sold in Japan Ebay by the same brand.
The only problem now is finding a tailor that would make such a suit for you. And how much you are willing to pay for it. But u stirred my long curiosity on the question if any tailors here willing to make one. Hell such jackets exists in movies. i think the first time i saw such jacket is in Mission Impossible tv series 1970s' one. Ok time to hit the tailors for pricing and feasability.
A reversible suit? This is new to me. I suppose the jacket must be of the casual / unstructured type to be reversible.
A reversible suit? This is new to me. I suppose the jacket must be of the casual / unstructured type to be reversible.
Yes. I mentioned non structured shoulders. It definitely existed a long time ago. My first encounter with them is in the movies. Maybe you have seens it in actin in TV or movies before, but never thought anything about it. The only time i seen one in person is at a bundle shop. I do not know what the details of the construction are because i did not see the insides. But i'm sure the idea is to replace the lining with panels similar to the outer shell with different suiting material. How they sew up everything together is some skill altogether.
Found the video.
This post has been edited by netmatrix: Jul 26 2012, 10:44 AM
The answer is CAN. U can ask the tailor to make a reversible suit. The suit does not having lining. U can have either regular lapels or notch lapels. The drawback of such suits is u cannot make very structured shoulders because it has to be able to be worn 2 side. And such suits are a little on the heavy side. It could be warmer too. But unless u can make it without using very thinck wool, then it might be wearable. The only time i have seen a reversible suit jacket is made by Commes Des Cargons. One side is regular black dress suit jacket, and when u flip it inside out the other side is dark blue in color and has a tribal print on it. I saw it once at some bundle shop. They were asking a lot for it. You could still see some beng sold in Japan Ebay by the same brand.
The only problem now is finding a tailor that would make such a suit for you. And how much you are willing to pay for it. But u stirred my long curiosity on the question if any tailors here willing to make one. Hell such jackets exists in movies. i think the first time i saw such jacket is in Mission Impossible tv series 1970s' one. Ok time to hit the tailors for pricing and feasability.
I went to Binwani's to speak about the tux/blazer combo, basically the tailor tells me not to do it. A tux is a tux, a suit is a suit. The satin/silk lining on the lapel is not easy to remove and even if you remove it, it will leave a mark. Besides, the buttons on the tux is made of satin/silk, just like the lapel. While the buttons are easily replaceable, the same cannot be said about the lapel.
The tailor advised me to do a lapel with the satin/silk finishing that is about 1/3 or 1/4 of the overall width of the lapel. With that, you'd at least be able to wear it and pass it on as a blazer in future. That being said, i don't think it's a good idea afterall. Sigh, gotta invest in a tux that i'm only gonna wear it once.
I went to Binwani's to speak about the tux/blazer combo, basically the tailor tells me not to do it. A tux is a tux, a suit is a suit. The satin/silk lining on the lapel is not easy to remove and even if you remove it, it will leave a mark. Besides, the buttons on the tux is made of satin/silk, just like the lapel. While the buttons are easily replaceable, the same cannot be said about the lapel.
The tailor advised me to do a lapel with the satin/silk finishing that is about 1/3 or 1/4 of the overall width of the lapel. With that, you'd at least be able to wear it and pass it on as a blazer in future. That being said, i don't think it's a good idea afterall. Sigh, gotta invest in a tux that i'm only gonna wear it once.
Like i said, u gotta find a tailor that is willing to make it. The guy at Binwanis probably able to do it. But its too much work maybe? Or maybe its hard to drape the jacket or make the lapels roll as they should? This is a challenge man. If i really wanna make one, i would tell the guy i wanna make 2 shirts that look like a coat. Sew them up side by side and make them reversible. Maybe need to go for fused lapels with thin body so they could be turned both ways. The only problem would be with the lapels and collars. Which would probably roll in a weird way. Maybe need to find the old way of creating overlap folds for the collars? Or creating a 2 hard sections between the lapel and body with a small unlined roll gap so it will hold the lapel will fold?
This post has been edited by netmatrix: Jul 26 2012, 10:55 AM