Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Harry the Tailor part of a dying breed

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Harry the Tailor part of a dying breed

    Harry the Tailor part of a dying breed

    Local News

    The Journal Times (Racine, WI)
    Wednesday, July 01, 2009

    BY MICHAEL BURKE ([email protected])

    RACINE - There was a time when people would line up to buy suits from
    Harry `the Tailor' Derderian.

    But for the past two or three years, the recession and more-casual men's
    wardrobes have clobbered this tailor's clientele.

    When he opened his shop at 3015 Douglas Ave. in 1991, `I had four people
    working for me,' he said. `Now I don't have enough work for myself.'

    That leaves Derderian with a slow business, skills that are increasingly
    rare, and a steam press that has also seen better days.

    `A steam press is very important for tailors,' Derderian said Monday,
    and his machine is 40 years old. `As soon as this thing gives up on me,
    I'm out.'

    Derderian, who turned 67 Monday, grew up in Allepo, Syria. At 18 he went
    to work with his godfather, a tailor so highly regarded that Syrian
    military generals came to the shop for their sartorial needs. There, `I
    was doing everything,' Derderian said. About five years later, his
    family came to America and to Racine, where his father had relatives.
    Harry went to work at Joseph Lawrence Inc., 516 Monument Square.

    `They had a tailor, but he was old. They were looking for a new tailor,'
    he recalled.

    Joseph Lawrence was a regional destination store, he said. Derderian,
    working six days a week, did most of the alterations - and said he was
    often also asked to act as salesman.

    They would say something like, `This is the guy who knows which one is
    going to look better on me.' He added, `The salesman would try to sell
    you anything.'

    Derderian worked at the Downtown store for 26 years until its closure in
    1991, then opened his own shop. The first day, he said, `People were
    lined up early in the morning.'

    His customers included corporate executives, doctors, bankers and
    lawyers. The late Sam Johnson of SC Johnson came to Derderian for
    repairs on the suits he had made in England.

    Customers bought suits from Harry the Tailor - either ready-made suits
    which he altered for no extra charge, or suits he made from scratch.

    All of his employees were foreign-born and trained as tailors. The best,
    he said - even better than himself - was the late Frank D'Acquisto.

    Derderian said he also had a woman `weaver' who could patch a fabric
    hole so it was invisible even to Harry's trained eye.

    But tailors are literally a dying breed, he said, and seamstresses are
    less skilled with men's clothing than with women's.

    And now, with dress codes at work more relaxed and a gloomy economy,
    Derderian contemplates a retirement he doesn't relish.

    Asked if there will always be tailors, he replied, `I doubt it very
    much. People are going to buy (a suit) and throw it away.'

    For more information, call the shop at (262) 639-4954.


    http://www.journaltimes.com/articles/2 009/07/01/local_news/doc4a4aa9fb86146947353912.txt

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X