Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Gentlemen, show us what you've made!

Rudie

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,069
Location
Berlin
How did you start? Did you learn the basics from your girlfriend or did you take a course or what?

I wish I could learn to make my own suits (without having to become a tailor and cutter first).
 

herringbonekid

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,016
Location
East Sussex, England
How did you start? Did you learn the basics from your girlfriend or did you take a course or what?

by taking some old suits apart and seeing how they were made. i learnt the basics by trial and error, and reading things online. when i met my girlfriend she helped to refine what i was already doing.
i have to say, and this isn't meant to put you off... it's hard work, time consuming and involves much frustration. the first few jackets i made weren't really wearable and were good only for practice. in fact i would advise practicing all of the procedures on scrap fabric first; such as welt pockets, pad stitching, putting on a sleeve etc. i wish i had done that now instead of jumping straight into jackets as i wasted some good fabric.;)
 

Mario

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,664
Location
Little Istanbul, Berlin, Germany
herringbonekid - I'm stunned again. Absolutely fantastic.

And I can only repat what I said before: I could never in my life muster the courage to even just think about something like this.
Plus, as seems to be the case with about everything, I simply lack the talent.
I'd already be more than happy if I was able to do even just the most simple alterations to my stuff. But alas...

Once again: Chapeau! :eusa_clap
 

herringbonekid

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,016
Location
East Sussex, England
Plus, as seems to be the case with about everything, I simply lack the talent.

i've never been a big believer in talent. i think you can learn to do almost anything if you persevere.
there are obvious exceptions such as people like Mozart who are born with a brain that seems pre-wired to pick something up effortlessly, and some autistic people who have extraordinary abilities to remember things. but for the rest of us, you just have to stick at it and practice like hell. most things that look easy really require a great deal of effort to get there.
 

Barmey

One of the Regulars
Messages
140
Location
Hastings
@ herringbonekid. I thought I recognised your stuff. Been an admirer of your blog and your work for quite a while. I was the one who once asked for your secrets about sourcing original cloth :)

I'm actually studying bespoke tailoring at Newham College, currently working on trousers at the moment. Looking for a workplacement so let me know if anyone knows of a tailor in need of an apprentice ;) Found a really great tool for anyone aspiring to copy classic tailoring to be The Modern Tailor Outfitter and Clothier. You can get reprints of the 1928 edition on amazon, or alternatively you can download the PDF version of the 1949 edition on The Cutter and Tailor Forum. http://www.cutterandtailor.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=877

working on a few things right now, hope to post some pictures up here soon.
 

Two Types

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,456
Location
London, UK
Barmey,

Good luck with the tailoring, and on finding a work placement. It will be good to have a trained tailor on the 'Lounge', hopefully to give some advice and hints to those among us who aspire to make their own clothes.
 

Rudie

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,069
Location
Berlin
So you taught yourself to sew by hand and sewing machine? Or did you get some basic training before taking the suits apart? If I took a suit apart I wouldn't know where to start. And how did you learn pattern making?

I agree most everything can be learnt by perseverance. Talents helps, though. And you seem to be very talented, if I may say so, when you've become that good with just sporadical training. In the Tailor & Cutter forum they advise to start with trousers as they are easier. Probably a good way to start learning the basics.

by taking some old suits apart and seeing how they were made. i learnt the basics by trial and error, and reading things online. when i met my girlfriend she helped to refine what i was already doing.
i have to say, and this isn't meant to put you off... it's hard work, time consuming and involves much frustration. the first few jackets i made weren't really wearable and were good only for practice. in fact i would advise practicing all of the procedures on scrap fabric first; such as welt pockets, pad stitching, putting on a sleeve etc. i wish i had done that now instead of jumping straight into jackets as i wasted some good fabric.;)
 

herringbonekid

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,016
Location
East Sussex, England
I'm actually studying bespoke tailoring at Newham College, currently working on trousers at the moment. Looking for a workplacement so let me know if anyone knows of a tailor in need of an apprentice ;)

so you're learning the proper way... very sensible. we'll all be coming to you for advice in a couple more years. ;)

So you taught yourself to sew by hand and sewing machine? Or did you get some basic training before taking the suits apart?

no formal training at all. just trial and error, a bit of online searching and the book 'Classic Tailoring Techniques' by Cabrera/Myers, which is very hard going in places but covers most correct ways of doing things. patterns came the obvious way; drawing around the pieces of disassembled suits.
 
Last edited:

Mario

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,664
Location
Little Istanbul, Berlin, Germany
i've never been a big believer in talent. i think you can learn to do almost anything if you persevere.
there are obvious exceptions such as people like Mozart who are born with a brain that seems pre-wired to pick something up effortlessly, and some autistic people who have extraordinary abilities to remember things. but for the rest of us, you just have to stick at it and practice like hell. most things that look easy really require a great deal of effort to get there.

Oh absolutely. It's just that talent can help you to learn things more easily and intuitively. I've seen this before with a few people who picked up an instrument and took to it as if they've never done anything else.

Well, I was born in the sign of taurus and are hence rather stubborn... ;)
 

Mario

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,664
Location
Little Istanbul, Berlin, Germany
so you're learning the proper way... very sensible. we'll all be coming to you for advice in a couple more years. ;)

Hepville has also just started his training as a bespoke tailor. :D

patterns came the obvious way; drawing around the pieces of disassembled suits.

Which is where the troubles start. I, for example, don't have a single vintage beltd back jacket that fits me to take measurements from. And if it fit me I wouldn't take it apart... ;)
 

Shangas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,116
Location
Melbourne, Australia
The end is nearly in sight!

The last thing I have to do is to join the shoulders!

Well.

It took several weeks of measuring, re-measuring, cutting, checking, pinning, checking, trimming, folding and countless stitches, all done by hand. But I finished!

IMG_1009.jpg


IMG_1010.jpg


It's a snuggish, but comfortable fit. It's comfortable to move around in, sit down in, lie down in, move my arms around in, and most importantly, none of my seams have ripped!

Just to remind you what this thing looked like, when I started it:

IMG_0831.jpg

IMG_0832.jpg
 
Last edited:

Swing Motorman

One of the Regulars
Messages
256
Location
North-Central Penna.
Great work, Shangas! You've more than earned the right to wear that proudly. :)

I love the feeling of knowing you completely fixed up an otherwise useless/questionable item, don't you?


-Steven
 

Shangas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,116
Location
Melbourne, Australia
Hi S/M. Yes, I'm very proud of my efforts. But in retrospect, I need to take it apart again. It's a bit snug (and that's saying something - I've already lost five pounds!). So I'm going to stitch in another inch and a half of fabric on each side, to give myself a bit of breathing-space before I pass out trying to wear this thing for any extended period of time.

I've prepared the pieces which I'm going to add in and I've already figured out how they'll be attached. Now I just need to pick out the stitching.

Ho-hum. We live and learn.

At least now, I have my grandmother's Singer up and running (see the appropriate thread in The Display Case). I used it to fix up the pieces that I'm gonna add on. If I can, I'll use it to sew them onto the waistcoat and do this last little alteration with the machine. Doing it all over again by hand is not something I relish.

I'm still getting a hang of handling this old beast, though. It's an electric knee-lever Singer from the early 1950s. I say 'knee-lever' machine, but I actually work the machine with one hand on the lever and one hand on the fabric. I don't trust my legs to have the sensitivity to regulate the speed as much as I would like. Right now, my comfortable sewing-speed is somewhere between dead-slow and slow-enough.
 

herringbonekid

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,016
Location
East Sussex, England
... I, for example, don't have a single vintage beltd back jacket that fits me to take measurements from.

i haven't taken apart a belted back jacket. there's no need; once you have a plain back that fits well it's easy to adapt it to various belted back treatments.
i've taken apart an English 1931 tux, an American 1933 suit (moth-damaged) and combined the best bits of each into my basic jacket shape. i've also taken apart an English 40s DB but haven't made the pattern into anything yet.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
107,217
Messages
3,031,294
Members
52,690
Latest member
biker uk
Top