You spent an hour in What Goes Around Comes Around. The garment deserves more than a rush-job hem.
SoHo moves more fashion per square foot than almost anywhere on the planet. But the shops that matter to us aren't the luxury flagships on Broadway — they're the vintage dealers, streetwear originators, and consignment institutions that give this neighborhood its actual garment culture. T(AA)ilor Shop comes from Harlem to work on the pieces that come out of these shops — pre-loved, scored, copped, and in need of someone who reads garments before touching them.
What Goes Around Comes Around on West Broadway — the standard since 1993. The RealReal's flagship on Wooster. Treasures of NYC on Mercer, by-appointment vintage. Kith on Lafayette. Supreme at 190 Bowery. Aimé Leon Dore. Noah on Mulberry. This is the most concentrated fashion-buying zone in Manhattan — and every garment sold here was cut to a standard pattern, not to you.
What Goes Around Comes Around (authenticated Chanel and Louis Vuitton alongside heritage denim). The RealReal (authenticated luxury consignment). Treasures of NYC (by-appointment vintage). 2nd Street (Japanese resale model). Funny Pretty Nice (ethically sourced Y2K vintage). The Re:Shop (reworked one-of-one Carhartt jackets and patched denim). Kith, Supreme, Aimé Leon Dore, Noah, Billionaire Boys Club.
Scored YSL blazers from WGACA that need the waist taken in. Margiela pieces from The RealReal that run long. Kith pieces where the fit runs slightly off. Carhartt reworks from The Re:Shop that need the hem cleaned up. Denim — enormous volume of vintage and contemporary. Hemming, tapering, waist adjustments, crotch-blowout repair. Denim is structural fabric and we treat it accordingly.
Ground Support on West Broadway — anchoring the neighborhood since 2009, described as SoHo's communal living room. Gasoline Alley Coffee doing direct-trade since 2011. Urban Backyard for specialty matcha with brick-and-botanical interiors. Bibliotheque for the bookstore-café-wine-bar atmosphere. Your loft works too — SoHo is walkups and cast-iron loft buildings.
SoHo's cast-iron buildings housed factories before they housed artists, and artists before they housed fashion. The neighborhood's entire history is repurposing — industrial space into creative space, creative space into cultural space. Garments get worked on. Garments stay in rotation. That's the AAnarchy ecosystem — anti-overconsumerism in practice.
Shoulder work on a structured blazer is detailed but absolutely doable. We assess the original construction — padding, lining, seam allowance — and give you an honest assessment before any work starts.
New garments absolutely. We work on vintage, pre-loved, and new pieces — streetwear, heritage, creative. If the fitment isn't right, we handle it.
Yes. We taper from the inseam to preserve the original hem, selvedge edge, and any existing fading at the cuff.
Most SoHo tailors serve corporate and luxury-retail clients doing standard alterations. We're a mobile atelier specializing in streetwear, vintage, and creative garments. We come to you and we read each garment individually.
We meet you in SoHo — at a café like Ground Support or Gasoline Alley, or at your apartment. We assess garments in person, discuss the work, give you a quote, and take the pieces with us.
We come to you. Mobile fittings at your home or office across SoHo and all of Manhattan.
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