Screen Accurate KotCS Pants -- Actual Maker FOUND
Posted: Thu Jun 12, 2008 3:52 pm
Since I kinda derailed an earlier thread about the shirt with my post that was mostly about the pants, I am breaking the discussion out into a new thread.
We might still be on to the source of the shirt, but right now we need to get a consensus here regarding who we want to handle this deal.
I know I am a newbie here, so I am asking a respected COW champion that everyone trusts to step up and handle this deal with the finesse that it needs.
Here is the discussion so far:
So who do we want to help us with this? Anyone, anyone?
Who has done this type of thing in the past?
We might still be on to the source of the shirt, but right now we need to get a consensus here regarding who we want to handle this deal.
I know I am a newbie here, so I am asking a respected COW champion that everyone trusts to step up and handle this deal with the finesse that it needs.
Here is the discussion so far:
Mannie Bothans wrote:ANZAC_1915 wrote:Why not call them?Fink wrote:So... no chance to get an original SA KoTCS movie (not promo) shirt?
"However, due to public demand, our Tailor Shop is now open to the public for custom made suits, pants, shirts and any garment that the wildest imagination can dream."
Wait up. We don't need everyone in the world calling Western.
Trust me, Paramount can be easily spooked here.
Western farmed out the orders and didn't make the shirts or pants in house.
I know who made the pants and they are willing to work with us, but we can't get an accurate replica if everyone bombards these places with calls. Here's why:
The exact fabric that the SA pants were made from does not exist off the shelf. The production company supplied their own wool to the people who sewed the pants, (and then a local dye shop was given this fabric, and they dyed and overdyed the wool to match samples provided by Paramount).
The people that made the pants are checking (as I type) to see if Paramount collected the scraps and leftover bolts after the tailors completed their jobs. He seriously doubts there is any bolt of SA fabric left, but if there are some scraps left, we have something we can use to match the color.
Even if the place that made the pants has no fabric on bolts, but does have trimming scraps, we probably won't be able to use the same the local dye shop that dyed and overdyed the wool for the production. The local dye shop is currently very tight-lipped on their work, so the lynch-pin on the color are the tailors that actually made the pants.
I'm going to try to see if the palce that sewed the pants has even a scrap of screen-used fabric that they can send to me.
If the place that made the screen-used pants actually makes the custom pieces for us, they would charge $400 for each pair of pants and $200 for each shirt, and even at that they wouldn't be using the exact fabric used in the films; they require all custom tailoring customers to supply their own fabric.
BTW, did I mention that I'm going to try to see if the palce that sewed the pants has a scrap of actual, finished KotCS fabric that they can send to me? Any COW pants-makers willing to make me a pair of pants for cheaper than $200?
Ken wrote:I think this is very sound advice - it would be very easy to either scare a potential vendor / supplier off or risk greatly inflated prices. What we need is something to be worked out by one ot two experienced and / or established individuals on everyone's behalf - eg - as was the case with the Flightsuits Expedition.
Ken
Mannie Bothans wrote:
Well, since I am neither established around these parts, nor experienced, I will gladly turn this over to someone we all trust. I just don't want us all to "blow it" and spook off our only shot at this.
If the community here wants to pick a designated and trusted broker, I will tell her or him exactly with whom I've talked, how to reach them, and whose name to drop to get him to take your call. I just stumbled into this information. And will gladly pass on what little I've gleaned to someone we want to handle this for us.
The guy at the place where they actually made the pants told me to call him back in 30 minutes and in that time frame he would go and look to see if there was any fabric samples around that he could use for the color. (I think he had to actually go to a seperate location to find out.) After 45 minutes I called him back and he still wasn't back; but he is a very busy guy. He's also very nice and jovial.
My initial conversation with him was just regarding a simple custom order for a pair of pants and a shirt (for myself). He was trying to think of ways to save me money. (E.G. he did not want to get into dying and re-dying wool, but he was willing to help me find an acceptable color match with other fabric). If someone can broker a deal between us and them, he might be willing to help us even more with the fabric. No one knows more about what was actually used than these tailors. Most costumers that do custom stuff for clients require the customer to supply the fabric, but if we are nice enough to this guy and we can through enough business his way, he might be even nicer and he might be able to use his connections at the same local dye shop to get the fabric just right for us.
This place AIN'T gonna be cheap, though. When I was talking to the people at Western, they were talking $500 for pants and $350 for the shirt and they didn't even produce any of the originals for KotCS. I am sure the guy I talked to would know who they used for the shirts, too, if it wasn't this company that definately did the pants.
I'm hoping that this could be handled in such a way that we might be able to walk out of this with the exact fabric, dyed just the same-- and then a cheaper tailor could produce the pants. Even if we had to pay this company an extra $300 to custom dye the wool for one pair of pants, we order one pair of pants, and viola-- we have the color and the pattern for only like $800. If we can get a board member to reproduce these cheap, we spread the cost of the pattern out over the entire order. OR, we just talk this company into helping us get a whole bolt or two properly died (if maybe this company would be willing to help us with that if we could send them enough customers who would use that fabric to buy $400 pants from them). It would definately take the right negotiator to broker this, because like I said earlier, this company has no desire to get into dying and redying right now.
So who do we want to help us with this? Anyone, anyone?
Who has done this type of thing in the past?