Thursday, April 12, 2007

SOMEWHERE IN TIME


tailor, originally uploaded by D'Arcy.

My parents and I live examples of the generation gap on a daily basis. Sometimes the ensuing tension proves frustrating, but most of these incidents are just harmless reminders that times change. For example, I overheard Daddy talking about Mars Robert the other day. That's ancient-speak for (Master) Robert E. Lee for all you non-Southerners. He's always using archaic colloquialisms. And then today he asked me if it's time to take his shirt to the tailor to have the collar turned. He was dead serious. Do tailors even turn collars anymore? I told him he should just throw it away.

There was a time when my family had a lot of their clothing tailor-made. They picked out the pattern, fabrics, buttons, and trim. Why don't we do that anymore? When we crossed over to wearing retail, I was too little to understand why we started buying off the rack. I doubt it was economics, as Dad's income increased through the years. Maybe society as a whole changed and we blindly followed.

Over Easter weekend, I visited Samantha & Steven - married friends of mine. On the way to the seafood place for dinner on Saturday, we passed a Seamstress Shop and I marveled that she could stay in business in this day and age. They testified that her workmanship was excellent and that she always stayed busy. I have a few dress shirts with overly long sleeves that might just need to pay her a visit. I guess having something altered is the next best thing to wearing custom-made, and I like the idea of supporting a local entrepreneur rather than buying from a big-name chain. Maybe I should bring Dad's shirt and ask her to turn the collar.

2 comments:

julie said...

i don't even know what turning the collar means! i can guess, but i've never heard that term. that's sad, huh?

Anonymous said...

Not sad. Just means you haven't hung out with our ancient forebears as much as I have.

Fashion fact: When the collar started to show wear, the tailor would remove and reverse it, exposing the protected side and making the shirt look new again. That was a trick after they started attaching collars. Before, shirts had detachable collars that buttoned in place, so they could be laundered separately (less wear to the shirt) and replaced rather than buying a new shirt when all that showed was the collar.

And that, kids, was today's installment of "Useless Historical Trivia."

--Patrick