My shoulders slope more than average and tip to the front. That means my jacket needs a bigger yoke panel than average. If I get an off-the-rack Wested with a big enough yoke, the rest of the jacket (the waist and chest) will be huge on me. I need a jacket made to my spec, not made to measure.Bespoke is usually a British English term for tailored clothing made at a customer's behest, and exactly to the customer's specification. Bespoke clothing is created without use of a pre-existing pattern, differentiating it from made to measure, which alters a standard-sized pattern to fit the customer.
Does anyone else out there have a frame that requires bespoke? Anyone have any luck getting a bespoke jacket from Wested? Any suggestions on how to convince Wested I need bespoke?
Here's my jacket history to date.
Jacket 1. I took the measurements. Jacket waist, chest, sleeves fit perfectly, but the yoke was too small. I had to pull my shoulders back to get into the jacket, but once I did the jacket looked great but I was uncomfortable.
Jacket 2: I visited Wested and had them take my measurements. I got a made to measure jacket. The yoke and sleeves are fine. The jacket is a bit big around the chest. This jacket is from 1999, and I'd like to update it. (Edit: Jacket is size 44. Measures 48 inches around chest with small pleats. Was Wested using the 80s fit back in '99?)
Jacket 3: I sent Jacket 2 to Wested for them to create Jacket 3 in 2004 or 2005. Can't remember. Jacket fit as good as number 2. With my extra-sloping shoulders the 3 inch pleats started to open up. (My shoulders sloped down, the yoke dropped, and the pleats opened even with 3 inch pleats and elastic! (Edit: Jacket size was 44. Chest measured a swimming 50 inches.) I sold the jacket.
I hope I hear from people in the same boat as me, and I hope to get comments on how to convince Wested to work with me a bit more than a made to measure jacket needs. (It's not like I won't pay for the additional labor and time.)
Many thanks for all the help you've all given me over the years.
Warm regards,
Rigor