Is now up.
http://davidreevesbespoke.wordpress.com/
I am finally getting to grips with getting my blog up mainly because I have been forced to sit still for a while, my wife and I are expecting our first born any time now and theres not much for me to do except fiddle around on the "interwebs".
I hope you find the blog informative and interesting. I will probably update twice a week or so moving forward, as of now though I have a bit of material and will maybe post once a day for a bit.
Best,
Dave.
I liked the quilted overcoat piece. I contemplated quilting a tweed weekend coat but not sure where to get a hold of quilting. Look forward to the write up about the coat's details.
Cheers David.
This is a post put up on the fly really as I noticed a few Mod sites taking a look at the blog since I posted about Dormeuil Tonik Mohair. I thought “the faces” would find this interesting.
A while back a young trader here in New York wanted something styled in a modernist way. As soon as he told me this I knew this suit had to be made from Mohair. Unlike myself he went for what is probably Tonik’s most distinctive color.
This Gentleman was training for a triathlon during his fittings and actually went down three suit sizes. You can see the athleticism in the suit itself. The suit is made rather short in the “bum freezer” style, unusually and bucking trends now it is a three button fastening with quite a high break. I kept the lapels a bit wider though and the styling quite sharp to keep it looking current rather than a reproduction of a 60s suit. I also purposely used black horn buttons rather than Navy to give the suit an almost animated sharpness.
The only time I successfully purchased a tonic suit on eBay it was too small. That suit is interesting and a bit reminiscent of the lapels on Arfur's bespoke coats on Minder. One thing I would like to see reintroduced is the mohair based Palm Beach cloth that was made from the 1920s-50s by the Goodall mill in Maine. It was used as the basic cloth for all the summer suitings in resort and dinner/summer wear occasions. Sorry this sounds a little stream of consciousness but you post reminded me of the use of mohair in fabric construction.
Call me a philistine, but I really hate mohair. Recently, I learned that my tailor is not fond of it either.
I also liked the quilted overcoat.
I'm all for novelty but for me it's hard to distinguish mohair from certain synthetic blend fabrics that have a shiny cast to them. Perhaps it's psychological.
For a night out, I think I could do a lot better with other cloths.
Perhaps not the top photo - he was a shiney suit man but I can't find many pictures of his shiney suits - I think he was a Tonik man.
My current tailor, who began tailoring in the early 60's has no problem tailoring the heavier mohairs like Tonik, John Foster &c. However, over the years he's tailored thousands of them, so he 'knows' how to handle the stuff as it were.
The only type of cloth, he doesn't like to tailor is Gaberdine, which he says is a pig to press and is difficult to alter because the cloth is dense and can leave needle/pin holes. A fine needle is a must. He's also not keen on Linen, not for tailor-abilty reasons though, but, because it quickly looks like a rag. He doesn't 'get' the concept of rumpled elegance. Tailoring to him is about smartness, not shabbyness.
...he's currently making me a linen suit...
He's not fond of lightweight cloth either, saying that 13oz is his sweet spot, he will go lower though, but with certain caveats in the sub 10oz range. He was impressed with the Harrisons' Frontier cloth he tailored for me last year, however.
He was making up a DB suit out of Minnis black chalkstipe flannel for a barrister. Absolutely beautiful.
I do like mohair but it is a young man's material and a bit lairy. Good for channelling your inner geezer.
I don't think I could get away with it now, even in rails bookmaker style.
Don't like reveres on the waistcoat - bad associations with Jeremy Thorpe.
Last edited by Kingstonian (2011-04-02 11:45:54)