A bespoke tailor's asset is not the cloth or the machines. It is the fifteen years of measurement history for two hundred clients, the notes on which shoulder sits an inch higher, the cloth reference for the suit made in 2011 that the client wants copied. Aurelian is where that memory lives.
Where it hurts today
The tailor who took the client's measurements retires. The book goes with him. The next tailor starts from zero.
The client asks for the exact navy from three years ago. The bunch is somewhere. The reference number is somewhere else. Nothing links back to the order.
Three fittings, six weeks apart, coordinated across the client's travel schedule and the cutter's holiday. Done in emails, tracked in nobody's calendar.
What Aurelian gives you
Every measurement, every fitting, every alteration — timestamped and versioned. Trends over years are visible; sudden changes flag for review.
Every bunch, every ordered length, every finished garment made from it. Repeat orders reference the exact prior specification.
Each commission carries its cutter, coat maker, trouser maker, cloth reference, fitting schedule, and delivery date. Progress visible to the whole atelier.
Family details, aesthetic preferences, past garments, upcoming events — the reasons a client returns for their tenth suit rather than trying the tailor next door.
How it flows
Full measurements, aesthetic notes, chosen cloth, agreed style. Photographed and logged.
Cutter and makers assigned. Progress visible to the front of house without a trip to the workshop.
Each fitting logs adjustments against the master measurement record. Nothing is left to memory between visits.
Final garment photographed and archived. Care notes and alteration policy attached to the client's record.
Questions
Both are supported natively. Each measurement stores its original unit and displays in the tailor's preferred convention.
Yes. Each garment supports multiple photographs — front, back, side, detail — with automatic thumbnails and full-size originals stored securely.
Yes. Both are supported with distinct workflows — MTM references a stock block with alterations, full bespoke tracks the full pattern history.
Begin