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Catoneinutica wrote:... Do I have to fly to HK after all?
Nearly every Japanese dry cleaners has an alterations person working for them as a subcontractor---Ask your dry cleaners for a recommendation if they feel they can't handle it.Samurai_Jerk wrote:I don't think you guys are following his question. He bought three suits online and needs them taillor fit so he's trying to find a place to alter three suits he already has.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:I don't think you guys are following his question. He bought three suits online and needs them taillor fit so he's trying to find a place to alter three suits he already has.
Taro Toporific wrote:Nearly every Japanese dry cleaners has an alterations person working for them as a subcontractor---Ask your dry cleaners for a recommendation if they feel they can't handle it.
Mike Oxlong wrote:Thread here may help:
http://www.styleforum.net/showthread.php?t=89738
I think you'll find a big price difference between bespoke and made-to-measure.
Catoneinutica wrote:I just wonder if I can take them to a department store like Isetan and have them altered. Will they do "after-market" alterations, or do you have to buy a suit there?
Mike Oxlong wrote:A fairly husky friend also swears by a Hong Kong tailor who visits Japan several times yearly. Could be the same guy Bro GG uses, or perhaps there are a lot of them making the trips. Either way, it seems to one of the better ways to go. That, or go to Thailand and use the dosh you save on condoms and clean hookers...
tinateoh wrote:I checked on the Yahoo Japan website, someone posted a similar question and seemed like somebody answered that those shop like Konaka, Aoki and Aoyama seemed to do alteration (even you don't buy from there), but I can't find any info when I go to the individual shop's (Konaka etc) website though. http://detail.chiebukuro.yahoo.co.jp/qa/question_detail/q1110911016 (in Japanese)
This tailor in Suginami-ku seemed professional in tailoring suit and they accept alteration job too.
http://www.tailor-maruyama.com/repair.html
One of the Tsukuda Reform shop has a chain in Saty at Inage, but you probably don't trust them. The problem is, I am not sure if you approach any big departmental store, and even if they accept your alteration order, do they send it to these reform shops anyway. Well, just one extra option here and you can always have a look if the place is near you. http://www.e-tsukuda.com/store06.html
Jack wrote:If you are looking for quality HK tailors are not the way to go. They are expensive plus very poor quality. There are a few that go around the world gather up orders and then mail the product to you. I know two: Maxwell and the other is Taipan Row but I am sure there are others. I have looked at their products and I have passed. For example, using a regular super 120 fabric for a two-piece suit costs around USD$1,700. However, even at that price the product looks and feels like shit. Now if one is not quality or fashion-conscious they'll wear it and think that its a great suit.
If you go to HK Central at some of the better quality tailors expect to pay USD$5,000per suit.
Tailor-made suits, generally, are more expensive than the off-the-rack stuff.
Catoneinutica wrote:I have to start wearing a suit or sportcoat/slax combo a few days a week (I'm handing out tissues in front of Chiba Sogo advertising my new Engrish school venture - I call it "Cato's Barely Legal Engrish").
Catoneinutica wrote:The kids over at Styleforum refer to the various well-known Hong Kong tailors by name and rate them among the best in the world, so they must be doing something right. The choice of fabric can have a huge impact on price. The Ginza Tailor quasi-bespoke suit I first inquired about had a base price of something like 135,000 yen, but when I selected a fabric I liked (I wanted a fine but dense wool for the mostly fetid, soupy climate here), the price took a huge jump. I assume the same would be true for HK.
Jack wrote:NO, it's not the same in HK. In HK it's cheap quality. I know the fabric makes a difference and trust me I know fabrics. I had ordered a suit from a tailor in HK (despite my previous experiences there telling me not to because this one was in glitzy IFC) using a Loro Piana fabric. Any suit with Loro Piana fabric would be over USD$4,000 but this guy was going to do it for me at USD$2,500. The finished product was shit so I refused to take it and did not pay for it although I lost my deposit.
They don't have the workmanship in HK. in Japan you will get the latest styles while in HK you will still get that 1980s cut.
Jack wrote:in Japan you will get the latest styles
Aoyama has done decent jobs for me in the past.tinateoh wrote:I checked on the Yahoo Japan website, someone posted a similar question and seemed like somebody answered that those shop like Konaka, Aoki and Aoyama seemed to do alteration..
Samurai_Jerk wrote:This is where you lost all credibility.
Jack wrote:Oh, because you lost the argument. Can't come up with facts? Who the fuck are you? Some ignorant looser English teacher in Japan?
Jack wrote:If you don't know that Tokyo is the epitome of fashion and style then you are even more retarded than I thought. The Japanese in Tokyo MAKE fashion. They set the style. Who the fuck are you to know anything about fashion?
All the European designers have agencies in Tokyo photographing people on Omotesando on their behalf to get their inspiration for fashion. Look beyond your fucking beer glass and learn about your suroundings before you open your useless mouth.
GuyJean wrote:Aoyama has done decent jobs for me in the past.
If you're around Tokyo, Sakazen actually did me justice.
IkemenTommy wrote:If you're around Tokyo, Sakazen actually did me justice.
That's where I got my last suit. They have a good selection of sizes and they aren't too bad actually.
BigInJapan wrote:Good to know as I was a bit turned off by the over abundance of chimpira type tracksuits etc. I've bought gaijin-sized socks at the Kamata branch as they had larger than 27 which is the limit everywhere else.
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