Tailors and dressmakers retire their pincushions as US demand for skilled sewers grows

NEW YORK (AP) — Hunched over a sewing machine, Kil Bae is hemming a dress inside his Manhattantailor shopwhen a new customer stops by with a vintage Tommy Hilfiger jacket he wants taken in.

Associated Press

The modeling agent paid $20 ata thrift storefor his reversible bomber style that's plaid on one side and red on the other. He's willing to spend $280 to have it slimmed down. Alteration requests with such a price disparity would have seemed odd a few years ago, the tailor says, but are helping to keep the bobbins bobbing at his one-man shop, 85 Custom Tailor.

Bae carefully examines the cotton jacket before moving in to pin it, circling the customer like a sculptor with a chisel. He started training as a tailor at age 17, in his native South Korea. Now 63, he's part of a shrinking breed in the U.S., where professional sewers, dressmakers and tailors areaging outof the workforce as their services find fresh demand.

Shoppers who grew up on disposable fast fashion are enlisting tailors and seamstresses to give off-the-rack purchases a custom fit orpersonal flair, to revive secondhand finds or to extend the lives of their wardrobes, according to fashion industry experts.Weight-loss drugslike Zepbound and Wegovy mean more Americans are seeking adjusted waistbands, tapered sleeves and other types of resizing, Bae said.

"I recommend this job to young people because this one cannot be AI'd," Bae said, notingartificial intelligenceis automating pattern making but so far can't replicate a tailor's handiwork. "Different bodies. Different shape. They cannot copy like this. If I close this door, I can go out and find another one."

But like engraving, repairing musical instruments and many otherskilled trades, creating and fitting garments to individual specifications hasn't attracted enough entry-level workers over the years to replacethe professionalsretiring their pincushions after decades of performing their craft.

An aging occupation

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimated almost two years ago there were fewer than 17,000 tailors, custom sewers and dressmakers working in business establishments nationwide, a 30% decline from a decade earlier.

Including self-employed individuals and people working in private households, the median age for all sewers, dressmakers and tailors was 54 last year, 12 years older than the median for the entire employed population, according to the bureau.

The income that a proficiency with needle and thread commands relative to the skills needed and the physical toll of bending over detailed work for hours likely discourages teenagers and young adults from heeding Bae's advice, fashion industry experts said.

The mean annual wage tailors, dressmakers and custom sewers earned as of May 2024 was $44,050 a year, compared to $68,000 for all workers, according to BLS calculations.

"Most of fashion training is really aimed at mass production, not spending time in a shop handmaking a garment," said Scott Carnz, the provost of LIM College, a for-profit college that offers degrees in disciplines from the business side of fashion. "The work is also tedious."

Online job postings for tailors, dressmakers and sewers have remained fairly stable, according to Cory Stahle, an economist with the research arm of jobs site Indeed. Between February 2020 and the end of the same month this year, advertised openings decreased by roughly 2%, while postings for both marketing and software jobs declined by nearly 30%, he said.

"There is a kind of a craftsmanship ... that I think is an important piece that we can't ignore," Stahle, who focuses on the U.S. labor market, said.

America's skilled sewers

Immigrants with and without permanent legal status, refugees and naturalized citizenshave poweredAmerica's garment industry for well over a century.

An analysis of recent census data by the Migration Policy Institute found about 40% of tailors, dressmakers and sewers were foreign-born, according to Julia Gelatt, associate director of the nonpartisan think tank's U.S. Immigration Policy Program. The biggest shares camefrom Mexico, South Korea, Vietnam and China, she said.

To address a worsening labor shortage, the fashion industry is looking to create anew generationof master tailors.

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Nordstrom, North America's largest employer of tailors and alteration specialists, teamed up with New York'sFashion Institute of Technologyto launch a nine-week program in advanced sewing and alteration techniques.

"Customarily, tailoring has never been part of the American skill set," said FIT instructor and Broadway costume builder Michael Harrell, who teaches the course.

Retailers see a growing market

Thefashion institutereceived 200 applications for the inaugural cohort of 15 students, who started in October andreceived certificates of completion in February,said Jacqueline Jenkins, the executive director of the school's Center for Continuing and Professional Studies.

The hands-on training was designed to prepare participants to work at Nordstrom. The luxury department store chain employs 1,500 people to provide tailoring and alternations, from hemming jeans and repairing rips to fitting suits and reworking evening gowns.

Ten members of the first class were hired or are in the process of being hired, Marco Esquivel, Nordstrom's director of alterations, said.

"We owe it to the broader industry to ensure that this is an art form that exists for years and years to come and continues to serve customers both within our walls as well as outside," Esquivel said.

Meanwhile, other retailers are expanding their tailoring services because of demand.

Brooks Brothers, a luxury brand that has made custom men's clothes since the 1800s, tested a similar service for women at five stores last year. This year, it expanded bespoke women's tailoring to 40 more stores. Prices start at $165 for shirts and $1,398 for suits, the company said.

No one to take over

Back at 85 Custom Tailor, Bae asked more than once if the customer with the Tommy Hilfiger jacket was certain he wanted to proceed with the alterations. Jonathan Reiss, 33, was sure. He said he plannedto wearthe jacket often.

"I think I fell victim to buying cheap stuff, and then you realize it just falls apart or shrinks or it just doesn't last long," Reiss said.

Bae has a son who's a year older than Reiss. He tried to persuade him to go into tailoring. The son used to work with computers and then opened a bagel shop.

"Young people. They just want to find a job in computers," Bae said. "I think that's too boring. I think this is very interesting. Every time, I am drawing in my head. I am like an artist."

Bae trained under his older sister and brother at their custom apparel shop about 93 miles (150 kilometers) from Seoul. After five years, he moved to South Korea's capital to work on custom orders and samples for various companies. He moved to the New York City area, where he worked as a pattern maker for Ralph Lauren, Donna Karan and other designer brands.

He opened his own shop in Connecticut in 2011, but the COVID-19 pandemic forced him to close after a decade. He reopened in his current location a year later.

He uses three different sewing machines: a basic one, another for for heavy materials like denim and leather, and an overlock machine, which cuts, trims, and finishes fabric edges simultaneously.

Bae said he intends to keep working as long as his hands stay steady enough.

"I'm always learning," he said.

Tailors and dressmakers retire their pincushions as US demand for skilled sewers grows

NEW YORK (AP) — Hunched over a sewing machine, Kil Bae is hemming a dress inside his Manhattantailor shopwhen a new custo...
Menopause products are having a hot minute. But doctors urge women to be wary of the marketing surge

DALLAS (AP) — Women suffering through the hot flashes, night sweats, mood changes and sleep problems that can come with menopause — all while looking in the mirror and noticing signs of aging — are being bombarded with products.

Associated Press

More open conversations about menopause and the period leading up to it — called perimenopause — are happening at the same time that marketing has been supercharged by social media. Women are being confronted by lotions and serums and light masks that promise to rejuvenate their faces and necks, dietary supplements claiming to do everything from boost moods to ease hot flashes and gadgets promising to help with symptoms.

"The marketing has gotten very, very aggressive. It's pervasive," said Dr. Nanette Santoro, an OB-GYN professor at the University of Colorado Anschutz.

Santoro and other physicians say that before spending lots of money on products that make big promises, it's important for women to talk to their doctors about what has actually been proven to help — and what could be harmful.

"It really pays to be very, very, very skeptical," Santoro said.

A flood of marketing

As menstruation winds down, women's levels of estrogen and progesterone drop. In some women, the symptoms can include hot flashes, night sweats, mood changes, vaginal dryness andsleepproblems.

Dr. Angela Angel, an OB-GYN with Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas, said that in the past, doctors would ask women around the age of 50 during their yearly exam if they were noticing any symptoms. But now, she said, patients are making separate appointments and initiating the conversations.

And at those appointments, she said, many patients tell her they've already tried something. "They're coming to see me because it's not effective or because it's caused some other side effect," Angel said.

Her hospital has recently started a menopause support group led by doctors and, at the request of participants, an upcoming session will focus on helping women navigate through the marketing onslaught.

Products aimed at women in that stage of life include everything from bracelets and rings claiming to help ease hot flashes to cooling blankets and bedding.

Santoro said her advice to patients is to "balance what you're going to spend over whether this might help you."

"If it's a bracelet that's going to cost you $20, it's not a big expenditure. It might provide some improvement," Santoro said. "Things that are not well tested might still work but if you want something that works — come back, I'm not going anywhere and I'll give you evidence based treatment."

Santoro said dietary supplements have not been proven in multiple, well-done studies to alleviate hot flashes, but many are low cost with a low potential for harm. She said if a patient wants to try something they see online, it's important to at least tell their doctor so they can be monitored while taking it — or warned off.

Doctors note that most of the time over-the-counter products like dietary supplements, shampoos or skin care that are advertised for menopausal women aren't different from regular products for that purpose ingredient-wise.

And some products could have side effects.

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Advice from doctors

Dr. Monica Christmas, director of the menopause program at the University of Chicago Medicine, said there's not one symptom everyone gets. Some women get few or none, she said, while others are extremely impacted by a variety of symptoms. What's most important, she said, is seeking medical help.

Doctors say thathormone therapyprescribed by a doctor can help with symptoms, as can prescriptions fornonhormonal medication. Some women are advised to avoid hormone therapy because they have had certain medical issues.

"Not everybody needs hormone therapy, not everyone is a candidate for hormone therapy, not everybody should be on hormone therapy," Angel said.

Regularexerciseand a healthy diet can help a lot, doctors say. That can help with weight loss, which is associated with reducing hot flashes and night sweats.

And Santoro notes that avoiding alcohol is a good step for someone with hot flashes since it can make them worse.

"Many of the symptoms actually get better over time, so sometimes it really is just a matter of lifestyle modifications and self-care and getting through this most tumultuous time frame," Christmas said.

For Brandi McGruder, a 49-year-old school librarian from Dallas, it clicked that she was in perimenopause last year when she went out to dinner for her birthday. When she and her friends entered the steakhouse, she was freezing cold. About 20 minutes later, she was burning up.

She said she made an appointment with her doctor, who prescribed an estrogen patch, which helped. McGruder said she's seen the advertisements for products aimed at women her age, but her first stop was her doctor.

McGruder said that while she doesn't like the way the symptoms have driven home that she's getting older, she's also embracing this time in her life. Her advice: "Laugh. It's OK. Reach out to others experiencing what you are going through, don't take it so serious."

Concerns about skin

There are changes withskinthat come both with time as one ages, and during menopause as skin gets less thick because of a loss of collagen and some of the hyaluronic acid that supports skin, said Dr. Melissa Mauskar, a dermatologist and associate professor at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.

Mauskar said using a prescribed retinoid or an over-the-counter retinol can help. Both assist with the production of collagen and reduce the appearance of wrinkles.

She said good over-the-counter moisturizers can be found at drugstores. Her advice is to look for ones with ceramides, which help keep skin hydrated.

"But you don't want to have anything that has too many additive ingredients — just because it's natural and a botanical does not mean it's better," Mauskar said. "A lot of those actually are contact allergens that can make people more sensitive."

Ingestible collagen is among the products being marketed to women, but she warns that studies are mixed and ingesting it "doesn't mean that it's going to make its way to your skin and plump up your face" — even though products claim it will. Light masks, she said, won't hurt and some studies show they could help, but they won't make a difference overnight. She said seeing any improvements from them would likely take daily use for many years.

She said sun damage is one of the biggest reasons patients have more wrinkles, so consistent use of sunscreen is a must for all ages.

"I think there's a lot of new fancy things coming out and targeted to perimenopause, menopause patients," Mauskar said, "but sometimes the tried and true things that we at least have the science for I think still are my kind of gold standard for my patients."

Menopause products are having a hot minute. But doctors urge women to be wary of the marketing surge

DALLAS (AP) — Women suffering through the hot flashes, night sweats, mood changes and sleep problems that can come with m...
Skilled sewers in demand as tailors and dressmakers age out, in photos

NEW YORK (AP) — Across the U.S., the number of tailors, dressmakers and custom sewing specialists is declining, even as demand for their work is growing. Industry experts say younger shoppers are turning to these professionals to tailor ready-made clothing, refresh thrifted pieces and get more longevity out of their wardrobes.

Associated Press Tailor Marco Lema, 35, of Ecuador, measures a denim alteration at Nordstrom headquarters in New York, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez) Tailor Marco Lema, 35, of Ecuador, works on a embroidery machine at Nordstrom headquarters in New York, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez) Tailor, Kil Bae, works inside his shop on Friday, March 27, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) Tailor Marco Lema, 35, of Ecuador, works on a denim alteration at Nordstrom headquarters in New York, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez) Tailor Marco Lema, 35, of Ecuador, speaks during an interview at Nordstrom headquarters in New York, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez) Tailor, Kil Bae, poses for a photo inside his shop on Friday, March 27, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) An embroidery machine works on a decoration at Nordstrom headquarters in New York, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez) Tailor Marco Lema, 35, of Ecuador, works on a embroidery machine at Nordstrom headquarters in New York, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez) Tailor Marco Lema, 35, of Ecuador, works on an embroidered shirt at Nordstrom headquarters in New York, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez) Tailor, Kil Bae, works inside his shop on Friday, March 27, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) Tailor, Kil Bae, works inside his shop on Friday, March 27, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) Tailor Marco Lema, 35, of Ecuador, works on a denim alteration at Nordstrom headquarters in New York, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez) Tailor, Kil Bae, sews a pice inside his shop on Friday, March 27, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) A heart-shaped pincushion bristling with needles hangs on the wall inside Kil Bae's store on Friday, March 27, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

Tailors Labor Shortage

Kil Bae, a longtime tailor in New York, notes that the rise of weight-loss medications such as Zepbound and Wegovy has led more people to seek alterations as their bodies change. At the same time, the pool of skilled workers is shrinking as experienced sewers retire. In response, the Fashion Institute of Technology has partnered with Nordstrom to create a training program aimed at addressing the shortage.

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This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

Skilled sewers in demand as tailors and dressmakers age out, in photos

NEW YORK (AP) — Across the U.S., the number of tailors, dressmakers and custom sewing specialists is declining, even as d...
65 Hilariously Shameless Times Designers Copied Famous Brands And Hoped No One Would Notice (New Pics)

Never underestimate the power of acreative mind. It has an uncanny ability to turn nothing into something, or an existing idea into an old-new, unique creation altogether.

Bored Panda

The following photos you'll see are excellent examples of the latter. Sure, they areknockoffsof an original brand, some of which may even border on copyright infringement. However, you can't deny that these imitations bring out instant laughter after a few double takes.

If you lovepunnyhumor, you will likely enjoy scrolling through. As always, don't forget to upvote your favorites.

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Gone are the days when most people were particular about buying only original products. Today, younger folks, specifically Gen Z, are actually embracing knockoffs.

Growth marketing expertJennifer Bakerrefers to this trend as "dupe culture," in which people even flaunt counterfeit clothes.

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"Previous generations may have shopped for knockoffs on the sly, but Gen Z has not only normalized buying knockoffs or generic products but has grown the #dupe movement into one of the most searched terms on social media," Baker said in a 2024 interview withThe Guardian.

The Guardian also reported that nearly one-third of adults in the United States "intentionally bought" a rip-off of a luxury product, while 11% of consumers in the UK admitted to buying "one dupe product at least once every few months."

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So, why do people resort to counterfeit products? Affordability is a common reason, but according toInvestopedia, it's also due to a desire to boost self-esteem.

"Whether it's basketball shoes or a polo, a luxury good can go a long way toward increasing self-esteem for some people, providing a sense of belonging and higher status," an excerpt from the article reads.

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But what does this mean for the brands? Can counterfeit products change public perception of them for the worse?Sophie Hardieof influencer marketing firm the Goat Agency says companies don't need to worry because "it's all so much in the open."

"Instead of fighting dupes, high-end brands should use the dupe to light-heartedly engage with popular culture. They should engage with it directly – and authentically – to bring new people in and show a confidence in the power of their brand," Hardie said in the same interview with The Guardian.

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Researcher, data journalist, and brand strategistEllyn Briggsshared a similar sentiment. According to her, the existence of knockoffs is a "consumer stamp of approval."

"Companies should feel empowered to lean into (it) – especially considering a wide majority of US adults view duping as a minor problem, if one at all," she said.

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65 Hilariously Shameless Times Designers Copied Famous Brands And Hoped No One Would Notice (New Pics)

Never underestimate the power of acreative mind. It has an uncanny ability to turn nothing into something, or an existing...

 

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