Berliner Boersenzeitung - Hong Kong tailors livestream in pandemic survival fight

EUR -
AED 4.260787
AFN 72.50444
ALL 96.181978
AMD 437.900577
ANG 2.076831
AOA 1063.891421
ARS 1620.797192
AUD 1.658085
AWG 2.088336
AZN 1.970026
BAM 1.960492
BBD 2.333215
BDT 142.138981
BGN 1.983118
BHD 0.437933
BIF 3439.954083
BMD 1.160187
BND 1.482103
BOB 8.005333
BRL 6.074626
BSD 1.158473
BTN 108.272547
BWP 15.829546
BYN 3.449307
BYR 22739.662744
BZD 2.329746
CAD 1.593499
CDF 2637.105366
CHF 0.913137
CLF 0.026773
CLP 1057.138921
CNY 7.982668
CNH 7.990491
COP 4305.824752
CRC 540.281506
CUC 1.160187
CUP 30.744952
CVE 110.507645
CZK 24.446704
DJF 206.188037
DKK 7.47187
DOP 69.466132
DZD 153.8229
EGP 60.730676
ERN 17.402803
ETB 182.584407
FJD 2.57144
FKP 0.869584
GBP 0.864519
GEL 3.149927
GGP 0.869584
GHS 12.65186
GIP 0.869584
GMD 84.694191
GNF 10186.440898
GTQ 8.873238
GYD 242.366364
HKD 9.089078
HNL 30.768235
HRK 7.535064
HTG 151.729892
HUF 387.927623
IDR 19571.192389
ILS 3.614736
IMP 0.869584
INR 108.276354
IQD 1519.844806
IRR 1525703.749098
ISK 143.596065
JEP 0.869584
JMD 182.468306
JOD 0.822596
JPY 183.95401
KES 150.227716
KGS 101.458707
KHR 4658.150428
KMF 493.079859
KPW 1044.172798
KRW 1733.818235
KWD 0.355516
KYD 0.965427
KZT 558.38482
LAK 25002.026821
LBP 103894.734936
LKR 363.764984
LRD 213.007367
LSL 19.642187
LTL 3.42573
LVL 0.701786
LYD 7.419431
MAD 10.861648
MDL 20.261845
MGA 4832.178169
MKD 61.598908
MMK 2435.757154
MNT 4138.328821
MOP 9.347014
MRU 46.53515
MUR 54.029674
MVR 17.924774
MWK 2015.24491
MXN 20.658637
MYR 4.553723
MZN 74.147926
NAD 19.514377
NGN 1601.232315
NIO 42.601697
NOK 11.302947
NPR 173.221657
NZD 1.983548
OMR 0.446116
PAB 1.158418
PEN 4.029285
PGK 4.995188
PHP 69.436894
PKR 323.98207
PLN 4.260299
PYG 7570.15157
QAR 4.227745
RON 5.095425
RSD 117.501369
RUB 95.04465
RWF 1693.872837
SAR 4.355741
SBD 9.341497
SCR 16.846394
SDG 697.271915
SEK 10.829979
SGD 1.480219
SHP 0.870441
SLE 28.482483
SLL 24328.551228
SOS 663.046126
SRD 43.317318
STD 24013.525898
STN 24.55825
SVC 10.135823
SYP 128.274956
SZL 19.549855
THB 37.671069
TJS 11.068611
TMT 4.060654
TND 3.370309
TOP 2.793451
TRY 51.447094
TTD 7.86462
TWD 36.983051
TZS 3010.684749
UAH 50.864146
UGX 4373.373308
USD 1.160187
UYU 47.203183
UZS 14160.080286
VES 529.630361
VND 30560.482466
VUV 138.324551
WST 3.164748
XAF 657.510898
XAG 0.016717
XAU 0.000262
XCD 3.135463
XCG 2.087707
XDR 0.819183
XOF 659.568219
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.878852
ZAR 19.574964
ZMK 10443.064834
ZMW 22.445109
ZWL 373.5797
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RYCEF

    0.7500

    16.05

    +4.67%

  • CMSC

    0.2300

    22.88

    +1.01%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    14.48

    +1.04%

  • BCE

    -0.0300

    25.76

    -0.12%

  • GSK

    0.1500

    51.99

    +0.29%

  • BCC

    3.5800

    71.88

    +4.98%

  • RELX

    0.4500

    33.81

    +1.33%

  • AZN

    0.4700

    184.07

    +0.26%

  • NGG

    0.0700

    82.06

    +0.09%

  • CMSD

    0.0816

    22.74

    +0.36%

  • RIO

    2.6900

    85.84

    +3.13%

  • JRI

    -0.0900

    11.68

    -0.77%

  • BTI

    0.5500

    57.92

    +0.95%

  • BP

    -1.2100

    43.57

    -2.78%

Hong Kong tailors livestream in pandemic survival fight
Hong Kong tailors livestream in pandemic survival fight / Photo: Peter PARKS - AFP

Hong Kong tailors livestream in pandemic survival fight

Assistants wielding multiple livestreaming mobile phones are now as crucial to Roshan Melwani's tailor shop as the measuring tapes, needles and fabrics that have made his Hong Kong family business so famous.

Text size:

The Melwani family has dressed everyone from American presidents to aristocrats and celebrities over the decades.

But the pandemic nearly sunk them -- and many of Hong Kong's once thriving tailoring businesses have not survived.

Few places remained internationally cut-off during the coronavirus pandemic for as long as Hong Kong, a self-imposed isolation that the city's government has only begun to lift in the last two months.

As a result, Melwani's shop Sam's Tailors has been reliant on online sales for most of the last 2.5 years, long after rivals in Saville Row, Milan and New York reopened their doors.

"Understand that if I did not have 60 years of cash behind me, I could not operate," Melwani, a third-generation tailor, tells AFP as a frenetic day of video calls with customers and livestreams to showcase new designs gets underway.

"Pre-pandemic I had a minimum 20 people that I would work with per day, sometimes 40 people, up to six days a week."

- Quality and speed -

Tim, a client in the United States, is the kind of customer that has helped keep Sam's Tailor afloat.

During the pandemic, he ordered an entire new wardrobe and now he's on the look-out for something more daring.

With the help of assistants broadcasting a dizzying array of choices over video call, Melwani steers Tim towards a burgundy three-piece with an inner lining featuring pin-up girls.

"Yeah, let's get to it," Tim says over the phone as assistants frantically jot down all the extra details in yellow notebooks.

Before the pandemic Hong Kong's tailors were a must-visit for many tourists thanks to their reputation for quality -- and their ability to turn a bespoke suit around as little as 24 hours.

The walls of Sam's Tailors are festooned with photos of famous patrons, from Bill Clinton, George Bush and Boris Johnson, to Bruno Mars, Russel Crowe and Meghan Markle.

The city's tailoring scene traces its origins back to Shanghai, which was renowned for its quality and craftmanship at the start of the twentieth century.

Many of those tailors relocated to Hong Kong in the aftermath of the Chinese Communist Party's civil war victory in 1949.

"People can get 10 suits in Hong Kong with the frequency they get one suit in Saville Row," Andy Chan, President of the Hong Kong Tailors Association, told AFP.

"This is why everybody came to Hong Kong to get a custom-made suit for them."

- Tourist desert -

In recent years Hong Kong's tailoring industry has struggled against fast fashion and online sales. But the pandemic has been especially brutal.

Hong Kong went from welcoming 65 million people in 2018 to just 91,000 in 2021 at the height of the pandemic, when all overseas arrivals had to pay for hotel quarantine of up to three weeks.

"We estimate for these four years (2018-2021) we had over 40 percent of the tailors that shut down," Chan lamented.

Hong Kong only scrapped mandatory hotel quarantine in September, long after rival hubs like Singapore had reopened to the world.

Even after that the city was still restricting where tourists could go for the first three days after arriving as they waited for test results, a measure that was removed earlier this month.

Roshan Melwani says there are times he feels angry but he tries not to dwell.

"You think it doesn't hurt my father, all his years of saving money, all that cash gone?" he said.

"I don't have time to feel that hurt, I have to devote my time to taking us forward".

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)