Haute Couture is a French phrase for high fashion. Couture means
dressmaking, sewing, or needlework and haute means elegant or
high, so the two combined imply excellent artistry with the fashioning
of garments. The purchase of a haute couture model garment is
at the top level of hand customised fashion design and clothing
construction made by a couture design house. A model haute couture
garment is made specifically for the wearer's measurements and
body stance. The made to measure exclusive clothes are virtually
made by hand, carefully interlined, stay taped and fitted to
perfection for each client.
High Fashion - High Cost of Haute Couture
Dependant on the Haute Couture design house and the garment,
the cost of a couture item runs from about ?10,000 to ?40,000
and often beyond that figure. A Chanel couture suit for example
in 2002 might cost ?20,000. If you are not rich it's hard for
an individual to understand why the price is so high, but it's
for service, workmanship, originality of a unique design and
superb materials of the finest quality.
In addition the client would get a perfection of fit only achieved
by painstaking methods of cutting and fitting to the client's
body. The manual labour needed to produce a garment this way
takes between 100-150 hours for a suit and up to 1000 hours for
an embellished evening dress.
The evening dress might have thousands of hand sewn beads probably
done by the expert and famous Parisian embroidery and beading
firm of Lesage, founded in 1922 by Albert Lesage.
A couture house like Chanel for example will have about 150
regular clients who buy couture and a house like Dior will make
about 20 couture bridal gowns a year.
Exclusive Expensive Haute Couture Fabrics
The fabrics available to the couture house would be very luxurious
and include the latest novelty fabrics and expensive silks,
fine wools, cashmeres, cottons, linens, leather, suede, other
skins or furs. In the case of a famous design house the design
and colour of a cloth, may be exclusively reserved for that
couture house.
Outside specialists make accessories either by design or inspiration.
Hats, trimmings, buttons, belts, costume jewellery, shoes and
innovative pieces are finely crafted to complement the fabrics
and fashion ideas being created. Superb craftsmanship, a fresh
idea and publicized internationally renowned names all command
a price to match. Those able to afford couture are happy to pay
for exclusivity and the privacy afforded by the system.
Toiles are Sample Garments
Designers create their initial designs either by using muslin,
which drapes well for flowing designs or by using linen canvas
or calico for more structured garments such as tailored garments.
These sample models are called toiles and save using very expensive
fabrics that can cost a ?100 or more a metre. The toile can
be manipulated, marked and adjusted to fit a particular live
model's measurements until the designer and his sale staff
are all satisfied.
The final toile of a design idea is an accurate interpretation
of the line or cut right down to the button placement or hemline
that the designer is seeking. Once satisfied the designer instructs
his staff to make up the garment in the selected and exclusive
materials. One seamstress or tailor will work on the garment
from start to finish. The cutting and finishing is done in one
room and the workroom manageress is responsible for everything
produced in that room.
Haute Couture - Appointments Only Please
When a customer decides to order a Haute Couture garment she
needs to first make an appointment with the design house prior
to any visit to Paris. Model garments from collections are
sometimes out of the country being presented elsewhere. Some
couture houses provide a video of the collection to serious
purchasers.
The Haute Couture Order
Once given an appointment the client is looked after by a vendeuse,
an important saleswoman responsible for customers, their orders
and supervision of their fittings.
The vendeuse gets commission on the clothes of her own particular
group of clients.
From the moment a client is received at the salon the client
is helped and humoured through all stages of fitting and sudden
difficulties. A difficulty could for example be another client
from the same city who wants the exact same design and colour
garment for a prestigious function. The vendeuse smoothes out
such problems knowing full well what a disaster it could be for
two women to pay vast sums for an exclusive haute couture item
only to bump into the acquaintance at the same venue in the identical
outfit.
Every ensemble ordered is made to the requirements of each individual
client. After choosing the model she wants, a customer is measured
and has to be prepared for 3 fittings, sometimes more.
After a fitting and adjustments noted the garment is laid mis
a plat. This means it's laid flat on the table, taken to pieces,
adjusted and put together again ready for the next fitting.
The vendeuse holds discussions between stockroom, embroiderers,
furriers and client. Her final inspection of a garment and her
expectation of the highest standards ensures it's approved as
couture and suitable to release to a client. Eventually the garment
fits like a glove highlighting the client's good figure points
and diminishing bad figure flaws.
Haute Couture Caters for an Exclusive Clientele
Sometimes designers work for their own label and sometimes they
work for a famous Haute Couture house. Very few couture model
sales are made in a year and these rarely total more than about
1500 sales for each house. This is not surprising when you
learn that only about 3000 women or so worldwide can actually
afford to buy clothes at the highest level, and fewer than
1000 buy regularly. See Theories Of Fashion
Selling the Haute Couture Dream
Because of this, Haute Couture actually runs at a loss. Design
houses present expensive million pound fashion shows of often
dubious, but outrageously noticeable designs intermixed with
exquisite garments on supermodels. The couture house sells
only a very limited percentage of Haute Couture model garments
to a contracting number of customers. The profits from this
activity are negligible, amounting to less than ten per cent
of gross profits of the couture name or even sometimes a loss.
You might then wonder what the point of it all is for so low
a percentage sale in relation to effort and deadlines. The answer
lies in the phrase 'selling a dream'. The fashion shows attract
huge media attention and gain enormous publicity for the couture
houses. They sell a dream of the intangible. A dream of chic
cachet, of beauty, desirability and exclusiveness that the ordinary
person can buy into.
If a consumer can afford the bottle of perfume, the scarf, the
designer boutique jewellery, the bag of the season, the couture
named cosmetics or the ready to wear 'designer label' products
they convince themselves they are as exclusive as the 1000 women
and the supermodels who regularly wear Haute Couture model gowns.
It is fair to say that the goods are usually of very high quality,
so many people are happy to pay a price that they feel reflects
the image and standard. However if this is all way beyond your
means and part of fantasy land why not get one of the many online
catalogues that feature clothes for real people.
Couture Front for Ready to Wear, Beauty and Perfume
Haute Couture is the prestigious front for French creative fashion
and original design. This ultimately translates into the lesser
priced, but still costly designer label known as Pret-a- Porter
or ready to wear. In turn, the ready to wear and couture house
beauty industry employs a huge workforce for the many lower
level sales of perfume and accessories. This makes large profits
for the couture design house through the volume of mass market
international sales.