Re: Mainstream gear in fact more accurate? (Answer: NO)
There were instances of mass production of uniform clothing and leather goods during the civil war. So...if a company decided to use the proper pattern and proper materials, then utilized the proper mass production techniques of the day they could, in fact, offer a better and more authentic product at a compromise price between the cheap of the "mainstream" and the expensive of the completely handmade. (don't get me wrong, I fully believe that an artisan should be justly compensated for thier research and labor)
The "assembly line" method of producing goods existed since the middle ages. I am sure that the depots had numbers of people working on on particular item on a uniform and when they finished that item they passed it down the line where another item would be completed by another set of people. Sewing machines were used during the period and I believe that I saw in some of the research articles that I have read that some of them used stitching that is not much different than what modern sewing machines use today. I also remember reading in those articles that some of the depots would use those machines and then have apprentices or novices sew the button holes or the other items that were easier and sometimes quicker to handstitch.
I am just putting this out there for thought. Reproductions could be done in the same fashion, and just as quickly, by some of the manufacturers of uniforms that we have now that are making said reproductions. (or contracting them to be made) Whether they do practice the old style of assembly line or not, I do not know for I am not in garment industry. Apparently, the depots did not have trouble turning out hundreds of thousands of uniform items in the short amount of time that they had. (4 years) The demand from our hobby is definitely not as great as the armies that were embroiled in constant campaigning and were in constant need of uniforms and accoutrements.
As to who is stitching and assembling the product, it really does not matter who does it or where they are doing it. What matters most is how they do it. I used to use this analogy when I spoke of guitars made in Japan vs. guitars made here in the United States. Luthiery is the same no matter what continent it is practiced on. (there are only so many different ways one can skin a cat, even a barn cat)
There are only so many types of stitches and so many methods of assembly so as long as the person doing the stitching and assembly is using the proper type and method, with the proper materials then the final product will be authentic whether it is made in Knoxville, Tennessee or in Birmingham, England or Pakistan for that matter.
The problems with the larger vendors that I have ascertained from reading the postings in this thread and in the research articles concerning the same subject, is that they do cut corners in thread, material and they allow the folks that manufacture the goods for them, beyond thier oversight, to slam them together as quickly as possible without any attention to the detail of proper construction for that particular pattern of garment.
There were instances of mass production of uniform clothing and leather goods during the civil war. So...if a company decided to use the proper pattern and proper materials, then utilized the proper mass production techniques of the day they could, in fact, offer a better and more authentic product at a compromise price between the cheap of the "mainstream" and the expensive of the completely handmade. (don't get me wrong, I fully believe that an artisan should be justly compensated for thier research and labor)
The "assembly line" method of producing goods existed since the middle ages. I am sure that the depots had numbers of people working on on particular item on a uniform and when they finished that item they passed it down the line where another item would be completed by another set of people. Sewing machines were used during the period and I believe that I saw in some of the research articles that I have read that some of them used stitching that is not much different than what modern sewing machines use today. I also remember reading in those articles that some of the depots would use those machines and then have apprentices or novices sew the button holes or the other items that were easier and sometimes quicker to handstitch.
I am just putting this out there for thought. Reproductions could be done in the same fashion, and just as quickly, by some of the manufacturers of uniforms that we have now that are making said reproductions. (or contracting them to be made) Whether they do practice the old style of assembly line or not, I do not know for I am not in garment industry. Apparently, the depots did not have trouble turning out hundreds of thousands of uniform items in the short amount of time that they had. (4 years) The demand from our hobby is definitely not as great as the armies that were embroiled in constant campaigning and were in constant need of uniforms and accoutrements.
As to who is stitching and assembling the product, it really does not matter who does it or where they are doing it. What matters most is how they do it. I used to use this analogy when I spoke of guitars made in Japan vs. guitars made here in the United States. Luthiery is the same no matter what continent it is practiced on. (there are only so many different ways one can skin a cat, even a barn cat)
There are only so many types of stitches and so many methods of assembly so as long as the person doing the stitching and assembly is using the proper type and method, with the proper materials then the final product will be authentic whether it is made in Knoxville, Tennessee or in Birmingham, England or Pakistan for that matter.
The problems with the larger vendors that I have ascertained from reading the postings in this thread and in the research articles concerning the same subject, is that they do cut corners in thread, material and they allow the folks that manufacture the goods for them, beyond thier oversight, to slam them together as quickly as possible without any attention to the detail of proper construction for that particular pattern of garment.
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