Jump to content

London jeans alterations


scully_100

Recommended Posts

Hemming is a really easy job for a decent tailor and by decent I don't mean Saville Row, your local high street dry cleaner / alterations place should do a good job. If you really want a great job you can go to Saville Row, the London store Start use a SR tailor to alter any jeans bought instore.

btw nowhere that I know of in the UK does chainstitching :(

Link to comment
Share on other sites

No place will replicate the thread thickness, not even the 45rpm store in Paris who have a Union Special! The thread thickness used on most jeans is about no. 20 and even if you find that thickness thread the colour probably wont be the same and the thread will be mercerised therefore shiny and preshrunk = shit for jeans! Then again other people may not be as much of a nerd anout these things as me and therefore not care.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

thats really interesting sythi, although it just makes me more reluctant to get them hemmed! Thanks for the info. I guess if you find a good place you could ask for cool coloured threads in the correct thickness ( purple on black denim springs to mind, mmmm...), but that seems like the only plus point.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah if you look at the thread on a pair of Japanese jeans whether raw or o/w, the cotton thread looks really hairy and ragged and dull. Nowadays people use mercerised cotton because it gives the silky sheen and because it doesn't shrink v. much at all. The opposite of all the qualities good for a pair of jeans!

btw if you're thinking about the Edo's, they do not feature chainstitching anywhere, they're hand felled everywhere. Even if you could get them chainstitched, I wouldn't. A simple lock stitch with a wider pitch than usual will look better.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

;) You're welcome. All this hoopla is precisely the reason I'm now gonna get jeans (ordered from Japan) hemmed at the store. They go to the trouble of having stock of the threads from different labels (i.e. they'll have a spool or two from Sugar Cane, Warehouse, SDA, Samurai etc.) with a view to matching the exact same thread type when it comes to hemming duties:D

I also suspect they'll use the best Union Special for the job (it's a compact model, looks unconventional) and will do an excellent job, seeing Stephane at the Paris 45rpm store chainstitch made me realise it's quite a skilled job really, requires concentration.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah if you look at the thread on a pair of Japanese jeans whether raw or o/w, the cotton thread looks really hairy and ragged and dull. Nowadays people use mercerised cotton because it gives the silky sheen and because it doesn't shrink v. much at all. The opposite of all the qualities good for a pair of jeans!

btw if you're thinking about the Edo's, they do not feature chainstitching anywhere, they're hand felled everywhere. Even if you could get them chainstitched, I wouldn't. A simple lock stitch with a wider pitch than usual will look better.

what's a pitch? ;)

also, which thread are you referring to when you say "no. 20" - various brands use different thread thicknesses for their chainstitching, so i'm a little confused.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah if you look at the thread on a pair of Japanese jeans whether raw or o/w, the cotton thread looks really hairy and ragged and dull. Nowadays people use mercerised cotton because it gives the silky sheen and because it doesn't shrink v. much at all. The opposite of all the qualities good for a pair of jeans!

btw if you're thinking about the Edo's, they do not feature chainstitching anywhere, they're hand felled everywhere. Even if you could get them chainstitched, I wouldn't. A simple lock stitch with a wider pitch than usual will look better.

OH, I wasnt thinking about the edos, they will be perfect for me at 31.5inches! I had my sammies in mind to be honest with the 36inch leg, I was very tempted to ask 2000db for 4inches to be taken off at rakuten/2nd but I bottled out because I was unsure of shrinkage in the length.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

what's a pitch? ;)

also, which thread are you referring to when you say "no. 20" - various brands use different thread thicknesses for their chainstitching, so i'm a little confused.

Pitch = the space between the holes punched by the machine thus ._._._._. would be a narrow pitch and say .__.__.__.__.__. would be wide pitch! I think!? :confused:

If you check this site http://www.willowfabrics.com/acatalog/Coats_Aida_Crochet_Cotton.html Gutermann rival co. Coats use a no. system to indicate thread thickness. I bought a ball of no. 20 from a local store and it's almost a perfect match for the thread thickness used on the hem of most jeans. But you're absolutely right, different companies use different thread thicknesses, but none as spindly thin as common dressmaking thread that most tailors will use. Hope this helps!

OH, I wasnt thinking about the edos, they will be perfect for me at 31.5inches! I had my sammies in mind to be honest with the 36inch leg, I was very tempted to ask 2000db for 4inches to be taken off at rakuten/2nd but I bottled out because I was unsure of shrinkage in the length.

Ahh I see. In my experience Sammy's shrink BANG ON to 36 inches, if anything a few mm over (again, in my experience, I'll put a YMMV as a disclaimer but I've so far shrunk 4 -5 pairs of Sammys in hot, almost boiling water) so next time just get them hemmed at the Rakuten store. Their chainstitching would be second perhaps only to the original. Sadly Samurai will not hem jeans ordered direct. Oh well. :(

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 6 months later...
No place will replicate the thread thickness, not even the 45rpm store in Paris who have a Union Special! The thread thickness used on most jeans is about no. 20 and even if you find that thickness thread the colour probably wont be the same and the thread will be mercerised therefore shiny and preshrunk = shit for jeans! Then again other people may not be as much of a nerd anout these things as me and therefore not care.

Yeah i noticed this with my evisu jeans i had chain stiched at take5. The thread looked much smaller on the take5 job then the original evisu. Also the colour isnt the same as the birght orange/yellow original one. I do like the job that Yamane will do for free in Hong Kong though.

Top Yamane Jeans bottom is original Evisu stiching form No2 Japanese jeans.

dsc00051mm7.th.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ahh, memories. Nice bump! Well Gordon and I have spoken a bit about this and I'm pleased to relay that he has gone to the trouble of procuring the same thread that the big labels in Japan use so expect any work of his to be beyond authentic. Seriously you NY folk are so lucky, two spots that do chainstitching while here in the UK we still have to partake a hop and a skip across the pond to Paris for such things. And as aforementioned, the machine 45rpm Paris have isn't designed for hems and can only accommodate fabric 14oz or less and the thread is of the thin mercerised kind. Stephane told me that they did have a proper set up but the powers that be in Japan arranged for them to send the stuff back :(

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So no where in the uk right now i can get this done? Its going to annoy me so much that i might not even wear my jeans now and just wear my yamanes first. I wish the evisu flagship store in london would pull their fingers out and sort this out. Every shop in japan does it and i think the NY one might too?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 months later...

'Kay so I've been trying to get my PRPS from a couple years ago reworked and took them to start in Shoreditch but they were going to shred them, so I rescued them and walked. And I'm so glad I did, cuz I've found the best denim repair guy right in the middle of Covent Garden.

I took my jeans in this afternoon and he took 3.5 " out of the waist and legs and 1.5" off the hems (which meant losing the chainstitch but left the selvedge and rivets intact and the wear I've achieved in the correct positions) while I sat next to him chatting about his denim collection and reading a paper. Took about 3/4 hourand cost £25.

Guys name is Dale and he works out the back of Barbers shop in a small alley that runs alongside the Duffer store. The address is 3 Nottingham Court, covent garden, London WC2 9AY. Tel 020 7836 9401.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 months later...
  • 1 month later...
  • 7 months later...

bumping this up.

I went to see Dale today about my Levi's crotch problem (bust and about to come apart like a flap if it wasn't tended to).

Unlike the impression sybaritical gave about Dale being able to get your jeans done the same day, I was given a timeframe of 10 days for him to work on them and they are going to cost 20 pounds for reconstruction and repair.

His business is picking up it seems.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

@ chambo2008

Yeap, he's still around. He does more than just jeans, although the American Classics store knew exactly who I was talking about when I said "denim repair".

Go ahead and take the thighs in. I wouldn't want to do any alterations to a pair of deluxes though, but to each his own. Share your experience when you pay him a visit, that sounds like quite a big tailoring job to do.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.



×
×
  • Create New...