Rachel Singer Mfc

Rachel Singer Mfc




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Rachel Singer Mfc









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About










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Interference Patterns












About
















Contact
















The process of commissioning a bespoke suit is distinctly different from ordering something ‘made
to measure,’ both in its storied tradition and the craftsmanship of its execution. Where the
template of a made to measure piece is simply adapted to your body’s size, a bespoke suit – from
the initial stages of consultation to the final fittings – is both designed and created with not
only your size and proportions in mind, but equally the practicalities of your lifestyle. The
garments are quite literally built through a series of in-person consultations, and thus the
final piece is hand tailored
to suit you, and your requirements, impeccably.
Each suit that I create is entirely constructed by hand – not only in the final silken handwork, but
in everything from the buttonholes to its temporary basting stitches. This means that every element
of the suit can be deconstructed, which not only allows for minute adjustments during the fitting
process, but equally for precise alteration if your body changes. The hand-padded horsehair chest
canvas and lapels creates shape, symmetry and comfort, and each of the pieces hold their form and
their line without constant pressing. This is the way that suits have been made over centuries, and
which defines a traditional Savile Row suit: there is a flexibility and strength to the seams when
they are sewn by hand that machine work simply doesn’t offer, and an overall precision and impact
unparalleled by alternate methods.
Where there are clear stylistic preferences that come into play when commissioning a bespoke suit –
colour, finish, texture – equally, the cloth of a garment plays into its overall impact and
practicality. A refined yarn will give more drape to an Italian style suit; a more stable cloth will
achieve a sharper, more traditionally British silhouette. A lightweight wool will suit warmer
climes; a more lustrous alternative befits conventional eveningwear. So, the process of choosing a
cloth is one that can feel alienatingly complex – and it is my responsibility, through a series of
conversations, to demystify the options, and to help you choose the perfect fabric for your perfect
suit.
To construct your first suit will require between three and five fittings; any subsequent commissions
will take far less, depending on how your body shape may have changed in the interim. The first
fitting will centre around balancing your basic proportions according to your posture; further
fittings determine how the suit will fit the breadth of the chest, the length of the legs, the
movement of the arms. As the suit is constructed, different elements of fit are highlighted – and
this way of shaping a garment ensures that each and every element is precisely tailored to suit your
body.
Where each Savile Row tailor has a particular house style, what I offer is the freedom for you to
choose whatever style suits your aesthetic and practical requirements. Whether you prefer a sharper
silhouette or a wider lapel, a particular pocket detail or trouser fastening, the beauty of bespoke
is that tradition can either be adhered to, or adjusted to your personal preference. The process of
determining the style of the suit is a collaborative one; I will suggest options in accordance with
your needs and shape, but the final decision is yours.
Having trained under Andrew Ramroop OBE at the Savile Row Academy, where I learned the formative
skills required of a Savile Row tailor, I want to retain the traditions of the trade – those which
have established Savile Row as the renowned epicenter of the tailoring world – while updating their
execution. My process is definitively focused on you, the customer: on your stylistic preferences,
on suiting your lifestyle, and by offering in-house or in-office fittings. The craftsmanship
required to build the perfect suit is rooted in history, but this does not mean that the process of
commissioning one needs to be staid or antiquated: simply that we can build on centuries of
tradition to suit your every contemporary need.
Prices for a bespoke suit, including all consultations, start at £4,600.
The process of commissioning a bespoke suit is distinctly different from ordering something ‘made
to measure,’ both in its storied tradition and the craftsmanship of its execution. Where the
template of a made to measure piece is simply adapted to your body’s size, a bespoke suit – from
the initial stages of consultation to the final fittings – is both designed and created with not
only your size and proportions in mind, but equally the practicalities of your lifestyle. The
garments are quite literally built through a series of in-person consultations, and thus the
final piece is hand tailored to suit you, and your requirements, impeccably.
Each suit that I create is entirely constructed by hand – not only in the final silken handwork,
but in everything from the buttonholes to its temporary basting stitches. This means that every
element of the suit can be deconstructed, which not only allows for minute adjustments during
the fitting process, but equally for precise alteration if your body changes. The hand-padded
horsehair chest canvas and lapels creates shape, symmetry and comfort, and each of the pieces
hold their form and their line without constant pressing. This is the way that suits have been
made over centuries, and which defines a traditional Savile Row suit: there is a flexibility and
strength to the seams when they are sewn by hand that machine work simply doesn’t offer, and an
overall precision and impact unparalleled by alternate methods.
Where there are clear stylistic preferences that come into play when commissioning a bespoke suit
– colour, finish, texture – equally, the cloth of a garment plays into its overall impact and
practicality. A refined yarn will give more drape to an Italian style suit; a more stable cloth
will achieve a sharper, more traditionally British silhouette. A lightweight wool will suit
warmer climes; a more lustrous alternative befits conventional eveningwear. So, the process of
choosing a cloth is one that can feel alienatingly complex – and it is my responsibility,
through a series of conversations, to demystify the options, and to help you choose the perfect
fabric for your perfect suit.
To construct your first suit will require between three and five fittings; any subsequent
commissions will take far less, depending on how your body shape may have changed in the
interim. The first fitting will centre around balancing your basic proportions according to your
posture; further fittings determine how the suit will fit the breadth of the chest, the length
of the legs, the movement of the arms. As the suit is constructed, different elements of fit are
highlighted – and this way of shaping a garment ensures that each and every element is precisely
tailored to suit your body.
Where each Savile Row tailor has a particular house style, what I offer is the freedom for you to
choose whatever style suits your aesthetic and practical requirements. Whether you prefer a
sharper silhouette or a wider lapel, a particular pocket detail or trouser fastening, the beauty
of bespoke is that tradition can either be adhered to, or adjusted to your personal preference.
The process of determining the style of the suit is a collaborative one; I will suggest options
in accordance with your needs and shape, but the final decision is yours.
Having trained under Andrew Ramroop OBE at the Savile Row Academy, where I learned the formative
skills required of a Savile Row tailor, I want to retain the traditions of the trade – those
which have established Savile Row as the renowned epicenter of the tailoring world – while
updating their execution. My process is definitively focused on you, the customer: on your
stylistic preferences, on suiting your lifestyle, and by offering in-house or in-office
fittings. The craftsmanship required to build the perfect suit is rooted in history, but this
does not mean that the process of commissioning one needs to be staid or antiquated: simply that
we can build on centuries of tradition to suit your every contemporary need.
Prices for a bespoke suit, including all consultations, start at £4,600.

The process of commissioning a bespoke suit is distinctly different from ordering something ‘made
to measure,’ both in its storied tradition and the craftsmanship of its execution. Where the
template of a made to measure piece is simply adapted to your body’s size, a bespoke suit – from
the initial stages of consultation to the final fittings – is both designed and created with not
only your size and proportions in mind, but equally the practicalities of your lifestyle. The
garments are quite literally built through a series of in-person consultations, and thus the
final piece is hand tailored
to suit you, and your requirements, impeccably.
Each suit that I create is entirely constructed by hand – not only in the final silken handwork, but
in everything from the buttonholes to its temporary basting stitches. This means that every element
of the suit can be deconstructed, which not only allows for minute adjustments during the fitting
process, but equally for precise alteration if your body changes. The hand-padded horsehair chest
canvas and lapels creates shape, symmetry and comfort, and each of the pieces hold their form and
their line without constant pressing. This is the way that suits have been made over centuries, and
which defines a traditional Savile Row suit: there is a flexibility and strength to the seams when
they are sewn by hand that machine work simply doesn’t offer, and an overall precision and impact
unparalleled by alternate methods.
Where there are clear stylistic preferences that come into play when commissioning a bespoke suit –
colour, finish, texture – equally, the cloth of a garment plays into its overall impact and
practicality. A refined yarn will give more drape to an Italian style suit; a more stable cloth will
achieve a sharper, more traditionally British silhouette. A lightweight wool will suit warmer
climes; a more lustrous alternative befits conventional eveningwear. So, the process of choosing a
cloth is one that can feel alienatingly complex – and it is my responsibility, through a series of
conversations, to demystify the options, and to help you choose the perfect fabric for your perfect
suit.
To construct your first suit will require between three and five fittings; any subsequent commissions
will take far less, depending on how your body shape may have changed in the interim. The first
fitting will centre around balancing your basic proportions according to your posture; further
fittings determine how the suit will fit the breadth of the chest, the length of the legs, the
movement of the arms. As the suit is constructed, different elements of fit are highlighted – and
this way of shaping a garment ensures that each and every element is precisely tailored to suit your
body.
Where each Savile Row tailor has a particular house style, what I offer is the freedom for you to
choose whatever style suits your aesthetic and practical requirements. Whether you prefer a sharper
silhouette or a wider lapel, a particular pocket detail or trouser fastening, the beauty of bespoke
is that tradition can either be adhered to, or adjusted to your personal preference. The process of
determining the style of the suit is a collaborative one; I will suggest options in accordance with
your needs and shape, but the final decision is yours.
Having trained under Andrew Ramroop OBE at the Savile Row Academy, where I learned the formative
skills required of a Savile Row tailor, I want to retain the traditions of the trade – those which
have established Savile Row as the renowned epicenter of the tailoring world – while updating their
execution. My process is definitively focused on you, the customer: on your stylistic preferences,
on suiting your lifestyle, and by offering in-house or in-office fittings. The craftsmanship
required to build the perfect suit is rooted in history, but this does not mean that the process of
commissioning one needs to be staid or antiquated: simply that we can build on centuries of
tradition to suit your every contemporary need.
Prices for a bespoke suit, including all consultations, start at £4,600.
The process of commissioning a bespoke suit is distinctly different from ordering something ‘made
to measure,’ both in its storied tradition and the craftsmanship of its execution. Where the
template of a made to measure piece is simply adapted to your body’s size, a bespoke suit – from
the initial stages of consultation to the final fittings – is both designed and created with not
only your size and proportions in mind, but equally the practicalities of your lifestyle. The
garments are quite literally built through a series of in-person consultations, and thus the
final piece is hand tailored to suit you, and your requirements, impeccably.
Each suit that I create is entirely constructed by hand – not only in the final silken handwork,
but in everything from the buttonholes to its temporary basting stitches. This means that every
element of the suit can be deconstructed, which not only allows for minute adjustments during
the fitting process, but equally for precise alteration if your body changes. The hand-padded
horsehair chest canvas and lapels creates shape, symmetry and comfort, and each of the pieces
hold their form and their line without constant pressing. This is the way that suits have been
made over centuries, and which defines a traditional Savile Row suit: there is a flexibility and
strength to the seams when they are sewn by hand that machine work simply doesn’t offer, and an
overall precision and impact unparalleled by alternate methods.
Where there are clear stylistic preferences that come into play when commissioning a bespoke suit
– colour, finish, texture – equally, the cloth of a garment plays into its overall impact and
practicality. A refined yarn will give more drape to an Italian style suit; a more stable cloth
will achieve a sharper, more traditionally British silhouette. A lightweight wool will suit
warmer climes; a more lustrous alternative befits conventional eveningwear. So, the process of
choosing a cloth is one that can feel alienatingly complex – and it is my responsibility,
through a series of conversations, to demystify the options, and to help you choose the perfect
fabric for your perfect suit.
To construct your first suit will require between three and five fittings; any subsequent
commissions will take far less, depending on how your body shape may have changed in the
interim. The first fitting will centre around balancing your basic proportions according to your
posture; further fittings determine how the suit will fit the breadth of the chest, the length
of the legs, the movement of the arms. As the suit is constructed, different elements of fit are
highlighted – and this way of shaping a garment ensures that each and every element is precisely
tailored to suit your body.
Where each Savile Row tailor has a particular house style, what I offer is the freedom for you to
choose whatever style suits your aesthetic and practical requirements. Whether you prefer a
sharper silhouette or a wider lapel, a particular pocket detail or trouser fastening, the beauty
of bespoke is that tradition can either be adhered to, or adjusted to your personal preference.
The process of determining the style of the suit is a collaborative on
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