MondoFW
Practically Family
- Messages
- 852
Hello all,
I thought I'd share something of note that I'd think could start some discussion. Today, I took a pair of 1950s pleated gab slacks (a $10 investment, thought it would be a good test run for my first trip to the seamstress) to my nearest tailor. Since I'm underage and broke, my mother took me and was willing to pay for the operation.
My objective was for a hemming and a tapering. The pants were quite wide, but I thought I'd be able to get a decent full cut after the operation.
I stepped out of the booth wearing the pants and the seamstress looks at me as if I'd killed a dog.
"Why so big??" she exclaimed
"Well, that's why I'm here." i replied.
She then examined the fit. To keep it short, she was dumbfounded by my preference of vintage over much of the modern plastic garbage that floods the market today (Not ALL of it, but let's be frank here). I won't bore you with specific dialogue, but she was convincing my mom that wearing wider, pleated pants is wrong and that investing/bringing the pants in today were a waste of time and my money. I tried saying that I didn't want to be like the youngsters wearing ultra-slim trousers, and that pleated pants can be a cool look. She rudely insisted I was wrong and seemed to, interestingly enough, NOT want to work on them, like she was denying my business. Regardless, my mother bought into her rhetoric.
Do a lot of tailors have a similar mindset? Even though she ostensibly gets a lot of people dropping off their goodwill/ebay finds, she was resentful of the idea of a kid donning the styles of older generations. Not all people will see eye to eye on style, and vintage fans likely know this especially, but she was, frankly, quite rude with the delivery of her message, and it was totally unexpected from someone who fixes/tailors garments to please customers. Perhaps I was just very unlucky with this tailor.
I thought I'd share something of note that I'd think could start some discussion. Today, I took a pair of 1950s pleated gab slacks (a $10 investment, thought it would be a good test run for my first trip to the seamstress) to my nearest tailor. Since I'm underage and broke, my mother took me and was willing to pay for the operation.
My objective was for a hemming and a tapering. The pants were quite wide, but I thought I'd be able to get a decent full cut after the operation.
I stepped out of the booth wearing the pants and the seamstress looks at me as if I'd killed a dog.
"Why so big??" she exclaimed
"Well, that's why I'm here." i replied.
She then examined the fit. To keep it short, she was dumbfounded by my preference of vintage over much of the modern plastic garbage that floods the market today (Not ALL of it, but let's be frank here). I won't bore you with specific dialogue, but she was convincing my mom that wearing wider, pleated pants is wrong and that investing/bringing the pants in today were a waste of time and my money. I tried saying that I didn't want to be like the youngsters wearing ultra-slim trousers, and that pleated pants can be a cool look. She rudely insisted I was wrong and seemed to, interestingly enough, NOT want to work on them, like she was denying my business. Regardless, my mother bought into her rhetoric.
Do a lot of tailors have a similar mindset? Even though she ostensibly gets a lot of people dropping off their goodwill/ebay finds, she was resentful of the idea of a kid donning the styles of older generations. Not all people will see eye to eye on style, and vintage fans likely know this especially, but she was, frankly, quite rude with the delivery of her message, and it was totally unexpected from someone who fixes/tailors garments to please customers. Perhaps I was just very unlucky with this tailor.