200 AÑOS ATRÁS, mucha de la ropa era hecha a la medida por sastres y costureras. Con el auge del “ready to wear” y el “fast fashion”, la tradición fue perdiendo protagonismo y su mercado se ha limitado a una minoría que sabe valorar al máximo una prenda hecha a mano. Son prendas con un lugar de honor en el clóset de un hombre bien vestido; también aplicada al diseño de cocinas o a las características de un coche, la expresión “tailor made” aún conlleva las connotaciones positivas de un producto personalizado.
LA ÚLTIMA PALABRA
Así como la sastrería es el arte de diseñar, crear y ajustar prendas, tailor proviene de la francesa tailler, que signi‚ca cortar. La palabra latina para sastre era sartor, “alguien que repara o arregla prendas”, de la cual se deriva la inglesa sartorial.
EL OFICIO
El arte del tailoring se remonta a la Edad Media, cuando los primeros sastres fabricaban prendas de lino que los soldados llevavan debajo de la cota de malla. Eran muy sencillas, pero su confección fue un oficio importante del cual salieron los primeros gremios de sastrería en las principales ciudades europeas. En el Renacimiento, la actitud respecto a la ropa cambió: más que artículos de primera necesidad, era la forma en que las personas expresaban su estatus social, al mismo tiempo que aumentaba la preocupación por resaltar el cuerpo humano. La moda empezaba a desarrollarse como concepto.
LA ENSEÑANZA
This story is from the Noviembre 2020 edition of Esquire Latinoamérica.
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This story is from the Noviembre 2020 edition of Esquire Latinoamérica.
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