3. AT RAYNER & STURGES, SHIRTMAKERS
When Boyd Bowman of Alexander Boyd, the Spitalfields tailor, introduced
himself to me as the last shirtmaker in England – I knew at once that I needed to
visit his factory, next to the old dockyard at the mouth of the Medway near
Chatham in Kent. Here at Rayner & Sturges, in a handsomely matchboarded
nineteenth century building, tall and narrow like a ship and with light coming
from windows on both sides, the finest bespoke shirts are made for Savile Row
and Jermyn St. And if you walk into Alexander Boyd’s tailoring shop at 54
Artillery Lane, Spitalfields, and order a shirt to be made for you personally, this is
where it will be cut and sewn.
4.
5. On a rise up above the Medway stands the heroic shirt factory, established here in 1913 by Messrs
Rayner & Sturges as part of a local clothing manufacturing industry in Kent that has all gone now,
apart from this. Many of the staff trained and worked in other companies in the vicinity, but now
the remaining skilled garment workers are all concentrated here, quietly making the very best
shirts together.
You walk straight from the street into the factory floor where a rack of magnificent Italian and
Swiss shirt cottons greet you on the left and paper patterns hang on the wall to your right. I set out
to follow the path of a shirt, leading me to Anthony Rose, dignified cutter of fifty years experience.
“You spent three years laying the cloth out and measuring the lengths before they let you cut it, “
he told me, “You’ve got to understand how the pieces go together in the finished article. We make
the full-matched shirt for stripes and checks, which means the pattern matches at the shoulder, the
sleeves, the pocket, across the front and the cuffs.” A master at work, he took out a length of bold
blue-striped cotton, folded the cloth carefully in half and arranged the patterns strategically,
cutting with a sharp pair of long, old scissors, to ensure an perfect symmetry of the finished shirt.
6. From the quiet of the cutting room, I climbed up to the sewing floor, echoing with the sound of
machines and filled with dazzling morning sunlight. Here, Carol Williams, the cuffmaker,
introduced herself, explaining that she began her career as dressmaker in Spitalfields at a factory
on the corner of Toynbee and Commercial St in 1959, earning three pounds a week. The queen
of cuffs today, she sandwiches the layers of shirting and liner together, sews them and turns
them inside out to produce a perfect cuff every time.
Commanding the centre of the floor are a small posse of machinists, each specialising in
different aspects of the shirt whether making collars or attaching sleeves. These lively ladies
dressed in different colours welcomed me to their territory where they work with relaxed
concentration and self-respecting perfectionism. The pieces of each shirt are gathered in a tray
that gets passed along the line, as each member of the team works upon the garment until a
beautiful new shirt emerges at the end. The skill and experience of these women working
closely together, gossiping, amusing each other and taking pride in their exemplary work is a
rare contrast to the sweatshops of mass-manufacturers.
7. Up on the top floor, in a room with a lofty aspect and a splendid wooden pent roof, I met Ryan
an apprentice pattern maker, whose job is to translate the measurements and other
specifications for a shirt into a paper pattern that can be sent down to Anthony on the ground
floor to set the whole process rolling. Ryan’s father John, who is also his master, was eager to
talk about all the famous names that wear the shirts made here, but I was more intrigued by
this unusual and harmonious father and son team.
Not only was the building reminiscent of a ship, but the employees were a top-notch crew in
which everyone contributed their different skills to a single end, permitting mutual appreciation
and respect, sharing pride in the finished result. While there is no doubt that the age of mass
production can sublimate and degrade the individual – that is what you read everywhere – here
in Chatham at Rayner & Sturges, I found another story which by its existence proves that a
different way can be viable. People work in decent conditions, without cutting corners, and
create beautiful shirts for which enough customers are prepared to pay the price. It may be the
last shirtmaker in England, but it is a new song of the shirt.