ASK many people in Liverpool where the Queen Arcade is and they will probably look at you blank.
But while the little alley, which cuts a right angle behind the
junction of Dale Street and Castle Street, may not be known to all, some
of the customers of the small tailor’s shop along it are known the
world over.
Craft Tailoring, possibly the only tailoring firm left in Liverpool
that actually hand makes its suits (most will take measurements and send
the dimensions off to a factory to be made up), has, in its owner
Walter Smith, a national award-winning suit-maker, who dressed the
city’s great and good from the 1960s onwards.
It was in the summer of 1962 that one of his regular clients, NEMS music store owner Brian Epstein dropped in to see him.
But this time, he was not looking for new attire for himself.
“He came to see me and said ‘I’m bringing you four lads, musicians,
and I’m going to manage them’,” remembers Walter. “I asked ‘Who are
they?’ and he said ‘They’re called the Beatles’.
“I asked the girls in the work room, ‘Do you know these Beatles?’
and they said ‘Oh yes, they play at the Cavern’. I said, ‘They’ll never
get anywhere with a stupid name like that’.”
After some haggling over the price, with Mr Epstein finding the 28
guinea per suit price tag a little steep – “It’s a bit much, they’re
only starting out” – a deal was struck at 25 per outfit.
The suits would be the ones they would wear for their first TV appearance, on a Granada TV show.
Mr Smith remembers to this day all the details of the design.
“It was a blue silk and wool mix. It didn’t have the rounded neck
line, it had little lapels, dropped shoulders, a slightly short box
jacket, and very tight trousers.
We had to have them measured up and ready in a fortnight.
“They came in the following Wednesday for the fitting, and they were
very lively. I remember their language was very choice. I had to say to
them, ‘Would you mind moderating your language, this is a tailors’
shop’.
“I remember they were wearing these very narrow trousers, and winkle
picker boots, and because they had been playing in the Cavern all night
and sweating, I had to ask them to leave their boots outside. They
smelled something awful.”
A fortnight later, the Beatles performed on TV, and took their first
steps towards stardom. But in that intervening period, one of those Mr
Snith made a suit for, Pete Best, was dismissed from the band, and
replaced by Ringo Starr.
Presumably Ringo donned the suit intended for the sacked drummer that he had measured up.
While Mr Smith, who learnt his trade as a 16-year-old and has been
in the business for more than 60 years, has had some eminent customers
over the years, the Beatles remain, understandably, his most famous
clients. And since he made those suits for the Fab Four, the tailoring
craft has declined considerably in the city.
“Back then, North John Street was full of tailors, it was the Savile
Row of the North. But today, men just don’t dress any more. When we
were young men, we would tell the tailor exactly what we wanted, that
was the way it was done. But today, the main thing a young man cares
about is his car.
“But our clientele is mainly people who want something a bit special, of quality, and individual.
“Ultimately, they look better and last longer, so despite the initial outlay, they are actually better value.”
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