Tailoring knowledge has traditionally passed down from master to apprentice, with little written down. Tailors had their own secret methods of construction, and were not keen on other tailors gaining this knowledge. Sadly, this has led to there being very little information available on tailoring today. Most books published were cutting manuals, with the authors touting their ‘perfect’ systems of drafting. There are a few books available on tailoring methods, but the modern ones often lack details, or present only one method of doing things, while the older books are becoming exceedingly rare.
I was fortunate enough to get hold of a three volume set of The Modern Tailor, Outfitter, and Clothier, by A. A. Whife. Whife was the technical editor of The Tailor and Cutter, a fabulous trade magazine that was published in the latter half of the 19th century, and up until the 1960s.
The edition I have is the fourth edition, from 1949. It’s quite interesting and informative, with chapters ranging from ‘Some Problems of the Tailoring Trade’, and ‘How to Start a Career in Tailoring’, to trouser, waistcoat and coat making. In between are chapters on how to draft almost any type of garment you can think of, as well as how to fit them properly. And that’s just the first volume.
The second volume has chapters on Clerical Garments, Court Dress, and Colour in Menswear, as well as whole sections on women’s clothing and military uniforms.