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Joe Hemrajani

Odd that he, himself, doesn't come to D.C. as he does come to NY. The first shirt I ordered from him, I ordered online. After that, I went and got measured to tweak the fit. It does say 'minimum two shirts for returning customers' on the site, but once you establish correspondence with him, he'll let you order one as I did with the tux shirt. Thinking getting a non-pleat tux shirt on his next visit and will be asking him about that Jerry Lewis tux I posted in the other thread.

Regards,

Senator Jack
 

Dr Doran

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,854
Location
Los Angeles
Hi Matt (or whoever else knows about this),

Beatuiful pants. Can you explain the business about rubber (or whatever else) inside the pants to keep the shirt tucked in? I want to know more about this. (Or perhaps there is another post I missed on the subject.)
 

Lawman

One of the Regulars
Messages
175
Location
Chapel Hill, NC
Matt, if we're looking for that great drape 1940s look (I'm thinking of those peak lapel suits in the other post with broad shouldered jackets and untapered pants), which model(s) should we aim for, and which fabrics?

Thanks.
 

Matt Deckard

Man of Action
Messages
10,045
Location
A devout capitalist in Los Angeles CA.
If Hemajani was coming to your area I'd say give him the details for which you are looking rather than pick from one of his online photos. Since it's not your normal made to measure shop you are lucky. It's more of a bespoke Via Satelite when you deal with Mytailor.com.

For the trousers I'd explain that I don't want a taper from the knee on. The rest of the leg from the rear to the thigh fine, though the look of the pipe leg is made from the drape from the knee on so after you know how wide you want it to be at the base of your trousers see that that is the same as the circumference at the knee.

As for the whoulders on the jacket. Find on you like and have that shoulder measurement copied. Made to measure shops use the shoulders to find what pattern will suit you best. Hemrajani makes a pattern for you so it's more custom than made to measure by today's definitions. For the drape, nothing is better than those old pics and photos. Though you can't get the drape to look correct unless you have the correct fabric and that means heavy fabric and that means higher cost.

I suggest finding your own, though if that's not an option, Ask to see swatches of his heaviest worsteds. Cashmere stretches and unless you want a tweed, you want a mill finished worsted in a 15-16 ounce as those are the heaviest and closest you might be able to find here in the States to those used on vintage suits. Overcoat materials are the other option though many times they are too felty nowadays and wear down very fast when made into trousers.


I'm desgning a few suits right now and in effect showing his tailors how to do some things that haven't been done in decades. Trousers, jackets,
vests. If they please the eye have him copy my details.

That help?
 

Matt Deckard

Man of Action
Messages
10,045
Location
A devout capitalist in Los Angeles CA.
Overall the consruction is much better than you see from most off the rack, even the higher end makers.

The suit is bigger than I like and longer than I requested, though what came back is better than made to measure by leagues and with fine tuning I'm sure he can make exactlry what I want.

The armholes are pretty good as I went through a rigour of extra measurements with Joe and showed him a couple vintage suits that had armholes the style for which I was looking. The armholes are flatter in the back than I requested, though they are better than any made to measure or off the rack I have lately seen.

Even though I state alot of negatives, I think Hemrajani is a really easy and understanding person when it comes to personal designs.

Pics too dark though that'a with the vest.
IMG_9134-vi.jpg



Still just out of the box and wrinkly. The fit is a bigger than I want and the jacket a bit too long.
IMG_9143-vi.jpg


I'm going to talk to him in person to clean up the back as the tailors put in darts instead of pleats under the belt creating a messy back.
Keep in mind there is a knife pleat between the center seam.
IMG_9146-vi.jpg


Custom shirt and the trousers to the suit
IMG_9148-vi.jpg
 

Mr. 'H'

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,110
Location
Dublin, Ireland, Ireland
Matt Deckard said:
Well considering that 16oz. was the light weight back in the 30's and the men were wearing much much heavier fabrics on average, I find the 16 oz. weights pretty cool.

16 oz = lightweight

x oz = medium weight

x oz = heavy weight

Just really curious what you think they considered a medium and a heavy weight back in the '30s....

[huh]
 

manton

A-List Customer
Messages
360
Location
New York
I think it's a bit of an exagerration to say that 16 ounces was lightweight in the 30s. Yes, weights averaged much heavier then. But 16 was more of a medium weight for business worsteds. Today, it is pretty much the heaviest cloth out there, with a small handful of exceptions.
 

manton

A-List Customer
Messages
360
Location
New York
Right, 20 to 22 was not uncommon for a city worsted. You can still get that today in tweed. But I am not aware of any worsteds currently in production that exceed 17/18, and there is precious little of that.
 
manton said:
I think it's a bit of an exagerration to say that 16 ounces was lightweight in the 30s. Yes, weights averaged much heavier then. But 16 was more of a medium weight for business worsteds.

I agree. The vintage lightweights (summer weight wools, ignoring the linens/silks) feel pretty much like a 9-11 ounce weight modern (all year, hmmmmm methinks not) suit . . .

I'd say the 15-16 Oz was about standard for everyday business suits, with heavier for your tweeds etc.

bk
 

herringbonekid

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,016
Location
East Sussex, England
Matt, the suit looks really good.
the only things i notice straight away:

-there seems to be a lot of gathering under the back yoke.

-the front cutaway could begin a little higher and be deeper. it seems to start late resulting in a harder corner and making the jacket look longer.

trousers look perfect !
 

Matt Deckard

Man of Action
Messages
10,045
Location
A devout capitalist in Los Angeles CA.
If you read my post i have more criticisms than that, though as i said, it is made very well... the vest is perfect.

The lapels have too much belly as well, more than the examples I showed him.

Problem is that I know exactly what I want and even when I am extremely spacific some of the things i lay out fall through the cracks somewhere along the line. I want certain things copied and not done using new ideas for what looks good and, well some tweeking and I think I can get what I want.
 

Mr. 'H'

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,110
Location
Dublin, Ireland, Ireland
manton said:
Right, 20 to 22 was not uncommon for a city worsted. You can still get that today in tweed. But I am not aware of any worsteds currently in production that exceed 17/18, and there is precious little of that.

I disagree, I came across this last week:

*("Robtex Univ ST205 20 oz 620 grms All Worsted")

I am going to get a suit made out of this....

See the thread:

http://www.thefedoralounge.com/showthread.php?t=16939
 

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