Accompanying my move to produce more industry focused
features, such as my 'Spotlight on the store' series, I'm also embarking on a
project to give my readers an insight into the young, new and powerful
up-and-coming voices of the luxury tailoring and bespoke world.
With this in mind let me introduce you to my first voice Mr.
Paul White, the newly appointed head of Hackett's personal tailoring service at
the company's soon to be opened new flagship store on Regent Street . Paul is at the forefront of
what for many is an exciting new movement in luxury tailoring and menswear. He's
young and a talented craftsman, yet business minded, with a clear idea of the
direction that bespoke tailoring and luxury menswear needs to take in order to keep
growing and innovating as an industry.
Paul has Savile Row running through his blood, having
trained for two years in Andrew Ramroop's Savile Row Academy before being apprenticed to Mr
Ramproop himself at Maurice Sedwell, Savile Row. Paul has always been very
appreciative of his training and the pedigree that a Savile Row apprenticeship
brings with it: 'I was very lucky to get an overview of every element of the
business'.
But crucially, it was the 'business' of bespoke tailoring
that Paul had on his mind, and his move to Hackett marks him out as one of the growing
breed of young tailors who are fast becoming the future driving forces behind
the development of the London bespoke tailoring industry. Paul has been
recruited by Hackett to help make changes to the company's personal tailoring
service which will attract a younger clientele and he was only too happy to
share his thoughts on the best way for the bespoke tailoring industry to do
this.
'Many young men feel like they'll be inadequate or
intimidated by the prospect of using a tailor. The fundamental thing that needs
to improve is accessibility, to build the confidence of young men that bespoke
tailoring is for them, and not just for them in a few years, that it is for
them now'. According to Paul, the tailor is a medium for the customer, 'the
paintbrush on the customer's canvass'.
'There should be no compromise and the customer should feel
confident enough to be artistic and creative in designing his own tailoring'.
As both a young dandy and a tailor, Paul appreciates better
than most that 'what you wear is a daily version of outward self-expression'
and that it is the role of the tailor to
fulfil this for the customer, no matter what his personal taste is. 'Bespoke
should be the realisation of exactly what you picture in your mind, and what's
going to work for you'. A large part of Paul's role at Hackett is to illustrate
to prospective customers and particularly the younger, trend-setting market,
that this is what Hackett can provide.
The task for the bespoke tailor is to give his customers the
confidence to know that they'll come into the shop be welcomed, and walk out
with a garment that is exactly what they envisioned, with all the benefits of
cloth, fit and construction that come with bespoke tailoring. This
understanding has to be passed onto the developing entry level market, and to
Paul, this means 'ensuring that we don't just advertise the possibility of
bespoke tailoring, but what bespoke tailoring actually is, and the benefits it
brings with it'.
'A brand like Hackett has the opportunity to bypass the
traditional reserve of tailoring, make the market more aware of its benefits,
increasing accessibility for our younger, and more establish customers alike'.
Its incredibly exciting to meet someone like Paul, who places
the craft of tailoring first and remains true to its traditions. What is
equally exciting, is that fact that many young voices in the craft, like Paul,
appreciate that for the institution of British bespoke to keep going strong,
the industry will have to innovate and accept that as well as a craft, bespoke
tailoring is a business too.
Thanks for sharing with us great information about this blog about Bespoke tailoring services. I really like this blog.
ReplyDelete