The Construction, In DepthWhat you’re actually paying for
Walk past any suit rack in Manhattan and the garments look superficially similar: two sleeves, a collar, a row of buttons. The differences that matter are structural, and most of them are sewn where you’ll never see them. Below is each of the seven details from the draft, explained the way we’d explain them across the cutting table at Bhambi’s, where we’ve been making bespoke suits in New York since 1968.
DETAIL 01The individual paper pattern
Everything in bespoke begins with the pattern. After your first consultation and measurement session, a cutter drafts a paper pattern from scratch — not by adjusting a standard block, but by translating thirty-plus measurements and posture observations into a two-dimensional map of your body. A dropped right shoulder, a forward head carriage, an athletic seat: all of it is drawn into the paper before any cloth is touched.
This is the brightest line between bespoke and made-to-measure. Made-to-measure starts from a factory’s pre-existing pattern and alters it within fixed limits. Bespoke starts from nothing but you. At Bhambi’s, your pattern stays on file permanently, refined with every commission, which is why a client’s third suit fits even better than his first.
CUTTER’S NOTE — 30+ measurements · posture mapped · pattern archived for future orders
DETAIL 02The full-canvas chest
Open up a bespoke jacket and between the wool and the lining you’ll find a free-floating layer of horsehair and wool canvas running from shoulder to hem. This canvas is the suit’s skeleton. Because it’s stitched — not glued — to the cloth, it moves independently, letting the jacket drape in clean, unbroken lines and gradually molding to your chest the way good shoes mold to your feet. A full-canvas suit at year five fits better than it did at delivery.
The mass-market alternative is fusing: a synthetic interlining heat-glued directly to the cloth. Fusing is fast and cheap, but it stiffens the drape, traps heat, and can bubble or delaminate after repeated dry cleaning — the rippled, blistered chest you’ve seen on aging off-the-rack suits. Once a fused front fails, the jacket is finished. A canvas can simply be re-pressed.
CUTTER’S NOTE — horsehair & wool canvas · stitched, never fused · molds to the wearer over time
DETAIL 03Hand-padded lapels
The lapel is the face of the suit, and its graceful roll — the way it curves softly from the collar to the top button instead of lying flat like cardboard — is built by hand. The tailor pad-stitches the lapel canvas to the cloth with hundreds of small diagonal stitches, curving the work over their hand as they sew so the roll is shaped permanently into the structure itself.
A machine can imitate the stitch but not the curvature; machine-padded lapels are worked flat, which is why they sit flat. Hold a bespoke lapel next to a fused one and the difference is immediate: one has life and spring, the other creases. It’s the single fastest way to read a suit’s quality from across a room.
CUTTER’S NOTE — several hundred pad stitches per lapel · roll shaped by hand, set for life
DETAIL 04The collar
A jacket can fit perfectly everywhere else, but if the collar lifts off your shirt when you reach for a glass, the whole illusion collapses. In bespoke construction the undercollar is attached entirely by hand, eased and shaped around the neck in small increments during your fittings. The result is a collar that hugs the shirt through a full day of sitting, standing, driving, and gesturing.
Collar gap is among the most common — and least fixable — flaws in ready-made tailoring, because it’s a symptom of a pattern cut for someone else’s posture. It’s also one of the details we check obsessively at the basted fitting, while the garment is still held together with temporary white thread and every line can still be moved.
CUTTER’S NOTE — undercollar set by hand · checked at every fitting · zero collar gap is the standard
DETAIL 05The armhole & hand-set sleeve
Counterintuitively, a smaller, higher armhole gives you more freedom of movement, not less. When the armhole is cut close to the body, the jacket stays anchored as your arm moves; the sleeve travels, the body doesn’t. Mass production cuts armholes large to fit more bodies, which is why an off-the-rack jacket hikes up at the shoulders the moment you hail a cab.
The sleeve itself is set by hand, with fullness eased into the crown so it follows the natural forward pitch of your arm. Sleeve pitch is individual — no two clients hang their arms identically — and it’s adjusted at the forward fitting until the sleeve falls in one clean line with no dragging or twisting.
CUTTER’S NOTE — high armhole · sleeve crown eased by hand · pitch matched to your natural stance
DETAIL 06Surgeon’s cuffs
Functional sleeve buttonholes — surgeon’s cuffs — are a quiet declaration. The name dates to military field surgeons who unbuttoned their sleeves to work without removing their coats. On a modern suit they signal something more practical: working buttonholes make sleeve-length alterations nearly impossible, so their presence means the maker was confident the sleeve was cut to the correct length the first time. On a bespoke suit, it was.
At Bhambi’s the cuff buttonholes are cut and finished by hand after your final fitting confirms the sleeve length — never before. It’s a small sequencing detail that ready-made manufacturers, who must finish garments before a wearer ever exists, simply cannot replicate.
CUTTER’S NOTE — working buttonholes · cut after the final fitting · kissing buttons, hand-spaced
DETAIL 07Hand finishing: the visible signature
The last layer of bespoke is the finishing — the details you can actually see. Pick stitching runs along the lapel edge and front in tiny, slightly irregular hand stitches that no machine perfectly imitates. The lining is felled to the cloth by hand so the jacket’s interior moves with the canvas rather than fighting it. Buttonholes on the front and lapel are sewn with silk twist, dense and raised; the finest version, the Milanese buttonhole, takes the better part of an hour each.
None of this is decoration for its own sake. Hand finishing is flexible where machine work is rigid, which means seams that give instead of snap and edges that age gracefully. It’s also where a house’s identity lives — a trained eye can often name the maker from the buttonhole alone.
CUTTER’S NOTE — silk-twist buttonholes · hand-felled lining · pick stitching at the edges