Two Types
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
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- Location
- London, UK
(For good measure stop shining your shoes.)
Or replace my shoes with large, dirty felt boots.
(For good measure stop shining your shoes.)
Cheers gents. I sent him a pair of trousers to copy (his copy was better than the original!!!). And he worked from an old, knackered double breasted jacket. It was all done by email and post! He really has to take the credit for making it look so central European.
Considering that Quirel is a self-taught, home tailor, the result is very good.
I'm always happy to encourage small scale producers!
The clothing that he, Nick D, and HBK make always blow me away, but seeing a full suit really sends me. Quirel really did a great job!
Wow, great work! The stripes even follow the curve of the lapels.
The run of the stripes can be modelled by stretching and ironing.
TT
You have some excellent suits which fit so well.
Have you carried the detail right through - one inside breast pocket, a ticket pocket, button fly and fob pocket - one back pocket optional or do you follow modern ways?
The mullet suit: Business at the front, party at the back!
The earlier posts in this thread (apart from the two more recent suits) are suits that were made for me between 1991 and 1995 - to be honest I don't think I had a clue about interior pocket placement at the time. I'll have to check.
I've always found the notion of the interior pocket being on the right hand side of a British jacket. Since the majority of us are right handed, it would make more sense to have the pocket on the left so we can reach in naturally with the leading hand. Also, I prefer to have the wallet in the left interior pocket so that it is beneath where the pocket handkerchief sits. That way, if the wallet is full (I'd be so lucky) or the jacket a bit tight (more likely) it doesn't show an unsightly bulge.