Beyond the sewing machine, the work of the hill represents a calm protection of black elegance and self-presentation in the south. Their stitch speaks not only in fit and cut but also as inherent dignity in care. “Tayloring is a lost art,” he reflects. “Young people do not have patience. It takes time to learn it.” Hill estimates that 75 to 80% of his business changes come from, but he still offers perceging through custom suiting, fabric switch and style books and patterns for each client, design, design and fitting. In an area with some successors, the hill keeps fast for the values ​​of tradition, discipline and heritage. “This kind of work, it teaches you to slow down, is patient,” he says. Although rapid fashion and fleeting trends make a lot of today’s fashion landscape, the hill is committed to a slow, sharp vision.
Tony Stovel and Cliff Green: Detroit of Hot Sam, Detroit
Photo: Andre Tarel McViliums
In Detroit, The Legacy of Black Dandyism, through Hot Sam, lives through the city’s oldest black -owned menwear store and the foundation stone of the community for more than 100 years. Cliff Green and Tony Stovel on the hull are two old school dressers, who have owned and operated and operated the downtown Detroit Institution for 31 years. The sartorial pair sees sewing not only as a business but also as a calling. “We are more than just salesmen, we are preservatives,” Green tells CirculationHe has been sewing since 1967 and considers every change as “a form of surgery”. A master tailor by training, Green began his craft in high school, which was hunk on breathtaking machines from the point of view of young black boys, which provoke their futures through clothes. “This hit me right – I had to take that tailoring class,” he remembers. What makes a great suit? “Clothes and internal functioning,” they say. “And expansion – which distinguishes a garment from being good to be really extraordinary.” For green, tailoring is more than a technical skill; It is an exercise in accurate, care and cultural memory. “When I sew, I wondering how it should go, how it should be fit, how it should feel on man. It means something to do.” They have designed wedding generations for weddings, proms, housegoing and first jobs, while all establish values ​​of pride, respect and appearance. “It’s not just about the suit,” he says. “We teach them how to stand long, how to move a man’s hand, and how to take himself.”