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They need to have the back fork released all the way from the top of the fork tapering down to the knee (back part of the inseam only). Taking in the seat only a little in conjunction with releasing the back fork should also help reduce excess fabric width wise.I have been having trouble with my pants for the last six months or so; after intensifying my workouts and putting extra focus into bottom half strength, my pants' back rise has started to rise up into my behind. This resulted in me throwing away some of my now overly tight pants, but the ones I have which even has excess fabric around the thigh and hip area have lately been doing the sam thing. Having the pants sit lower on my waist does not remedy the problem. I have lately wondered if this is fixable or if I need to buy new pants. Basically, the problem quite equal to the figure A here (but not as bad as in the picture) - would it be possible to have it explained more in depth on what alterations must be done?
I have also attached some photos, and even thought there is no strictly NSFW with these, I would not recommend looking at them at work.
The roll is from your square shoulders and not erect posture. If the shoulders, front and back, had been squared rather than squaring up the back shoulder only you would have benefited more. It would have helped clean up the slight bowing of the lapels over your chest and not changed the balance. At present the jacket looks like it has a short back/long front and lowering the back at the neck/collar many have contributed. Just a guess. It looks like she tapered the leg on only one seam, I think the inseam and not reduced the leg on both the inseam and outseam. When the leg clings and shows the shape/curve in your stance, it is too tapered IMO. Looks like you have a right high hip the way the trouser leg hangs. Cleaning up the diagonal line under the seat is about changing the front/back balance by lowering the back part at the top of the waist. Not always possible on a finished trouser.
If the shoulders were squared at the backpart only, it will naturally shorten the back. That will caused the jacket to fall down in the back because it requires that extra length. This is where you're getting the unbalanced look and feel.Thanks a lot for the comments. Very helpful.
Before the jacket collar was shortened, it rest perfectly on the shirt collar without any collar gap. After I had my tailor shorten the jacket collar, however, I noticed a small gap between the shirt and jacket collar. I had to slightly pull my lapels forward to make the collars lie closely to each other, which probably created the "unbalanced" look you pointed out.
Does shortening the jacket collar usually create the collar gap problem? Would you suggest me to ask my tailor to re-do her job and fix the created collar gap?
Thanks again.
Hey resident tailors,
I was hoping to get your assessment as to the 2 shirts attached, in particular:
- which one fits best between the two for future MTM orders (going to send one to Luxire to copy and adjust);
- based on which one fits best, how I can improve fit (e.g. adjusting more for forward shoulders, which is fairly evident in this case).
Thanks in advance!
They need to have the back fork released all the way from the top of the fork tapering down to the knee (back part of the inseam only). Taking in the seat only a little in conjunction with releasing the back fork should also help reduce excess fabric width wise.
That's about all you can do.
I have been having trouble with my pants for the last six months or so; after intensifying my workouts and putting extra focus into bottom half strength, my pants' back rise has started to rise up into my behind. This resulted in me throwing away some of my now overly tight pants, but the ones I have which even has excess fabric around the thigh and hip area have lately been doing the sam thing. Having the pants sit lower on my waist does not remedy the problem. I have lately wondered if this is fixable or if I need to buy new pants. Basically, the problem quite equal to the figure A here (but not as bad as in the picture) - would it be possible to have it explained more in depth on what alterations must be done?
I have also attached some photos, and even thought there is no strictly NSFW with these, I would not recommend looking at them at work.
Is it reasonable and worthwhile to get a pair of chinos taken in at the waist if they have felled-seam construction? I just got these from United Stock Dry Goods, and they're amazing but one or two sizes too big.
I'm pretty sure I've only had pants with busted-seam construction altered in the past.
Also, now I kinda wanna find the matching jacket.