Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Tailor-Made

It seems that we’ve approached the age when every single person we have ever met in our entire lives is getting married. We are, of course, happy for them and happy to attend their pre-wedding dinners, engagement lunches, bridal showers, bachelor/bachelerotte parties, traditional engagements and incredibly overblown white weddings. We are more than happy to buy them gifts and put our own jobs and families on hold to help them plan their big day(s). We are thrilled to collect their aso-ebi and celebrate with them in curiously coordinated outfits. (For the uninitiated, "aso-ebi", which literally translates as "family cloth" is fabric distributed by the families of the bride/groom to their guests, who wear them to show solidarity and affiliation). The only problem with said aso-ebi is that, at some point, it must go from raw French lace or simple Ankara to fabulous halter dress or sexy mini-dress . Herein comes a visit to the professional that is dreaded and feared far above any dentist, gynecologist or mortician on the planet; the Nigerian Tailor

If you don’t have war wounds inflicted upon you by a psychotic tailor, you either are not female or you do not live in Lagos. End of story. First of all, there’s the trouble of finding one. You ask your friends because their outfits are generally hip and trendy and mostly well-made. You become alarmed when your friends stop returning your phone-calls and start avoiding you in public. Finally, one of them is kind enough to explain to you that the quickest way to expose yourself as the mannerless, gauche plebeian that you are is to ask another woman who her tailor is. Strike One. You then resort to asking your mother and her friends, but generally the styles that those tailors are capable of are not any that have been seen out in public on the more recent side of 1970. Strike Two. Finally, you decide that you’ll thumb through the pages of the fashion magazines and go with the Designer du Jour. Sure, she might be twice as expensive as anyone that’s been recommended to you thus far, but you’re willing to pay for quality. You are not going to be upstaged at this wedding. Not by anyone. It’s bad enough your dress is going to be made of exactly the same fabric as 665 other guests’ at this shindig.

You get to the designer’s little store on Victoria Island, the front for her mainland operation. Madam is not around (tending to far more important clients, naturally) and her girl will have to take your measurements. Fine, if Madam has put her trust in her, why shouldn’t you? Vamonos! Measurements: taken. Deposit: paid. Fabric: left. All systems go.

You return to the shop two weeks later, as instructed. As a matter of fact, you give them a few days grace period because this is Lagos and things happen and you’re an extremely understanding and benevolent person. The assistant apologizes profusely and tells you that your dress is not ready because the tailor has been taken ill with a violent case of explosive diarrhea, but it’s almost done, please be patient, let him just finish it now now ehn. You are pissed, fuming even, but you figure you’ll sit and wait for it. You make that decision before you spy your fabric, still in its original packaging sitting expectantly in a corner by the wall. That was absolutely the last straw. You call up the designer and are informed by some mysterious character on the phone that she’s off buying fabric in Dubai and won’t be back for another month. It’s just between you and Patience now and she was about to see what happened when you lost all of yours.

You return for your fitting two days later following a sheepish phone-call from Patience. Unfortunately for you, it’s the day of the wedding but you remember observing her as she took your measurements (as you had been warned to do) and she got them just right, so you should be fine. You try on your gorgeous dress -- the one you spent hours and hours poring over seventeen issues of Vogue to find -- and it looks like your favorite part of Old Navy pajamas. The straps are falling off your shoulders, the bust area is pushing your boobs up and flattening your chest at the same time, the sleek pencil skirt is closer to a balloon skirt, the embellishments look like they came off a Christmas tree, the zipper is exposed, the hems are undone, and the dress is not lined. Murphy’s Law is in full effect on your outfit; everything that can go wrong absolutely and most disastrously has.

This monstrosity needs to be taken apart immediately so you grab the tailor by the scruff of his neck and set him to work. He’s clearly still in recovery because he is slow as molasses and by the time your dress has gotten to a state where you would even contemplate wearing it out in polite company, you are receiving calls from your friends on their way home from the wedding, asking if you and the bride are fighting. “If you didn’t want to come to her wedding, why bother taking the aso-ebi in the first place? That’s just really tacky.”

Strike frigging Three.

People spend so much time thinking up catchy names for their hot, new boutiques, but I think every clothes shop in Lagos should be called exactly the same thing; Caveat Emptor. Proceed, dear friends, at your own risk.

14 response(s):

Myne said...

I laughed so much especially when I got to the end of the post. I have had so many similar experiences with tailors. I wonder that they're still in business.

Ellie said...

HILAR! Again, VERY well done!

Um, so why is it rude to ask a friend who her tailor is? (No, I've never made this mistake before, but I totally would have!)Help!

SongSmith said...

Elisa, I have NO idea. I'm new here, so I don't know the way of the native people. I can only assume it's self-preservation. If you ask me the name of my tailor and i give it to you, and you overwhelm her with your Ghana-Must-Go full of fabric and she no longer has time to make my stuff, then i lose. Or she starts making the designs that i've picked out for me AND ONLY ME for you too Why would I risk that? Go find your own!

SongSmith said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
TheAfroBeat said...

HAHAHA, i love it miss songsmith!! I really don't know why people are afraid to share their tailors but you give some pretty good options. As for the spending the entire day of WITH the tailor as opposed to with the wedding crew...At that point, i would have to draw the line, take a strip of fabric and head off to rock that strip like there's no tomorrow...but then again, in Lagos, pp would just think you were being tacky and didnt buy the whole aso-ebi...go figure!

SongSmith said...

LOL! @TheAfroBeat. You can't win for bloody losing!

isha said...

Strike 3's hilarious mehn! You're so tacky. LMAO.

But for reals tho, I've had my share of tailor-made woes. My last stint as a bridesmaid, the bride got this tailor to sew what should have been very nice dresses. Saying that the dress depicted pure monstrousity would be a grave understatement. The clothes were so terribly sewn! Thank God for the carpenter, I mean, tailor I run to once in a while, who was able to make the dress wearable, at least for the ceremony.

My mother's tailor is actually a jasi guy, so he understands the 'generational gap'. I felt funky about the 'mother's tailor' relationship, but I've been disappointed by all the Designer du Jours on the island. Festac is where my boutique is.

I'll think about giving you his contact details...

P.S. From my experience tailors are better than 'tailoresses'.

Dropsofglamour said...

LOL! When I find a really great tailor, I have always been more than happy to share him/her with my friends. I never understood why people kept their fabulous tailors a secret until very recently.
My very good friend was getting married and I gave her aso-ebi to my tailor. You guys should have seen the Hollywood red carpet design I picked out. Another friend of mine who also needed a tailor to sew the same aso-ebi asked if I knew anyone and me with my big helpful head gladly gave her my tailor's number. Three days to the event, he brought back this monstrosity that looked nothing like my original design. I eventually had to take it to my mom's tailor the morning of the engagement because the zip ripped apart when I tried to sit down.
So the dress was now semi-presentable. I walked into the hall already annoyed that the guy had ruined my dress only to be faced with my friend's (the one i gave his number to) stunning outfit. I was shocked!! How could the same guy produce this stunning outfit?? I had a rage blackout right there and ran outside to call the tailor to give him a piece of my mind. He finally admitted that he was so swamped with work that he outsourced my outfit and personally made my friend's outfit.

Can you believe that crap??

LucidLilith said...

This has got to be one of the funniest posts I have read in a long time! I don't do aso-ebi. At all.

SongSmith said...

@LucidLilith LOL! Thanks a ton! My mother has warned me to shut down the aso-ebi now, before you end up having to take aso-ebi for every single wedding, funeral, 40th birthday, pet-naming...

Ms Olaf said...

LMAO LMAO LMAO!

Eish! I love this! looool

bob-ij said...

HAHAHA!
The sad part is that it's so true! All the lies... Spotting your fabric is the worst part. LOL

~x~

Oluwafynboi said...

OMD! Dropsaglamor! That's officially one of the worst kindness-backfire stories I've ever heard! I know I can be helpful like that too, but when it backfires...chai!

My heart and my sympathy go out to you.

SongSmith! Wicked post!

SCW said...

wow these are pretty intense stories lol. Why are people going to the theaters to get their feel of horror movies. Right here is where its at, lol.

(Maybe I should just learn to sew. It can't be that bad.)

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