A word of caution with Cheo, if you ask too many questions of him (2 questions would be getting dangerously close to that threshold), which habitues of these MBs have a propensity for doing, few words will be bespoken.
Marc
Mr. Nino Corvato should be on anyone's short list of excellent bespoke tailors. In addition to having prestigious academic credentials in teaching the art of tailoring and being one of the few remaining tailors with an in-house tailoring staff, Mr. Corvato's work is impeccable. I remember that even the belt loops on a pair of trousers he showed me were hand-sewn, an impressive detail. Last but not least, he is a gentleman of the first order and a very nice man.
Marc
There are tailors not set up to machine pad a lapel, but none who are not set up to hand pad. All it takes is time, a needle and some thread. I would just make sure to mention it one more time and perhaps bring a picture or something.
I think that it is generally considered apprentice work. I would bet that the people in any shop can do it.
Given the myriad of horror stories I've heard regarding seriously botched suits from some of the prominent New York "custom tailors," costing upwards of $5,000+, you could do far worse than Ercole and pay far more.
I was there this weekend and Frank told me that while they usually do the lapels by machine, the can do them by hand if the customer asks.
Great selection of cloth - I looked through the Porter and Harding Hartwist book in the short time I was there. In the next couple of weeks, I am going to have them do a blazer for me (or rather re-do something that I stupidly had done at LS) and then maybe try a more complicated request.
Thanks for the advice.
There's a custom tailor located in Queens, NY named Khamal (sp?) with whom I've spoken, who hand-makes clothes mostly serving the NYC artistic community. Unfortunately, I lost his number but if anyone knows him, perhaps he can post here. He could be a real jewel.
Last edited by Marc Grayson (2006-11-01 17:10:49)
Last edited by Cantabrigian (2006-11-01 17:43:04)
Putting the tailor through 30 fittings would also be a tad excessive.
For whatever it's worth, my rule is that I'll specify style, look and feel in detail. Of course some of that will involve talking about construction - canvass weight/stiffness, shoulder padding, and type of sewing (i.e. there are some things that, tailored clothing philistine though I still am, I think ought to be done by hand and that it makes a visible difference). But the mechanics of construction, I necessarily leave to the man with the shears or needle or the guy who talks to the guy with the shears or needle.
All I know about that famous suit is what I have read on AAAC but it seems as though Frank is the one who wanted to keep doing fittings until he considered it good enough to hand off. Personally, I would not be able to take going to that many fittings but it doesn't sound like a form of tailor torture, of if it was, it was self-inflicted.
Take everything you read on message boards, regarding various bespoke, um, "projects" with a large, LARGE grain of salt.