robison@eosp1.UUCP (Tobias D. Robison) (03/27/84)
If it is true that women's clothes are more expensive than men's, and not made as well, the paradox is even stranger -- don't forget that many women MAKE clothes, saving a great deal of money. I'm under the impression (please correct me if I'm wrong), that it is primarily women's clothes (well, and children's clothes) that get MADE. I rarely hear of a man, or woman making dress shirts, suits, and sports jackets for men, or even slacks. (Sweaters are another matter!) - Toby Robison allegra!eosp1!robison decvax!ittvax!eosp1!robison princeton!eosp1!robison
betsy@dartvax.UUCP (Betsy Hanes Perry) (03/28/84)
"I rarely hear of a man, or woman making dress shirts, suits, and sports jackets for men, or even slacks. (Sweaters are another matter!)" -- Tony Robison This one has a pragmatic, non-sexist answer: Men's suits and sport jackets require TAILORING. I'm a serious seamstress, and I wouldn't touch a man's suit with a ten-foot-pole. Any garment which wants to be closely fitted to the body, allow easy movement, and fall in a rigidly-defined set of shapes, is difficult to put together. If you look at any 'ritzy' (Brooks Brothers, say) clothing ad, you'll see that a typical man's jacket is built up of several layers of different sorts of cloth (underneath the wool exterior) in order to give the correct shape and drape. Not something to be lightly attempted by an amateur. By contrast, most patterns you'll find in a Simplicity catalog fit quite loosely, even by current fashion standards. This ensures that cutting mistakes don't cost too much, and that any fool (my apologies to my fellow sewers) can put together a wearable dress from the pattern. In any case, most women who sew sew dresses and shirts; very, very few of them go so far as to sew their own suits. Yours, three-feet-deep in unfinished sewing projects, -- Betsy Perry UUCP: {decvax|linus|cornell}!dartvax!betsy CSNET: betsy@dartmouth ARPA: betsy%dartmouth@csnet-relay