Dear Michael,alden wrote:But I have to add that my easiest and most creative collaboration is with one of the bigger tailoring houses in Western Europe.
Your “bigger tailoring house” started off as a small independent tailor who refused to give in to mediocrity. Back in 2003, on the old Yahoo groups London Lounge, we were already posting pictures of suits made by Edwin Deboise and Tom Mahon, two renegades who ditched London because of its suffocating costs structure and went up to Cumbria so they could continue to take the time to make bench made clothing in “the old A&S way.”
Both of these guys became LL members and contributed greatly to our knowledge back then. And smart LL members rewarded both tailors with their custom and their operations grew because these two stuck to their guns and refused to betray their craft.
Now that Edwin has taken over English Cut his business is even bigger, but he is and will continue to deliver according to the canons of his craft. True quality is not a fetich, its a winning business model. Edwin and Matthew are the proof point.
thank you for your good reply. I was concerned that the discussion in this thread was taking an unfortunate direction towards sentimental tailoring orthodoxy. And I wanted to share my experience with very different tailors (different in character, style and approach to the craft), which somehow all worked very well for me. Not that I'm particularly fond of trying out 30 tailors, in the contrary. I like to stick to my craftsmen if things go well, and they always did go well so far - touch wood

I was talking of a different tailoring house, more South of Rome actuallyalden wrote:So David, unless you are talking about some other “bigger tailoring house in Western Europe”, you have added your testimony (and fetish) to the others who militate in support of traditional benchmade tailoring.

It is too early for me to comment on Steed. But I'm confident and look forward to a long lasting collaboration. And I always praised Mr Mahon's work for me - it is sad indeed what happened with English Cut.
What may be missing in many men today is understanding craft and craftsmen. We live in an industrialised world transforming itself to digital quickly - craft is a far older "crime"alden wrote:I do absolutely agree with the importance of interviewing tailors to know if there is a right fit and then to build a good working relationship. I am probably a bit over a million times repeating this seemingly incomprehensible wisdom.

In your reply to Frans, you mention the big SR houses. I have no experience with them. But who am I to blame them? More than half of their business is coming from overseas and mainly the US. They adapt to their clientele, it would be suicidal not to do so. You see the same type of customers when you walk into the Ritz in Paris or the Palace in St. Moritz or Gstaad. Among other things, they also want a suit from Savile Row, and they want a known label inside...

Cheers, David