Calibration is part of the atelier process.
It ensures that structured garments maintain the balance and proportion intended in their design.
1 — Measurement Submission
2 — Measurement Review
3 — Pattern Drafting
4 — Calibration
5 — Production
6 — Pattern Archive
After placing your order, you will submit measurements using our guided garment measurement system.
Clients measure a shirt that fits them well and provide height and weight as reference points.
Optional fit reference photos may also be submitted to help verify proportion.
All submitted measurements are reviewed before drafting begins.
If any measurements appear inconsistent or require clarification, additional information may be requested to ensure balanced proportion.
This review process helps prevent errors before production begins.
Once measurements have been verified, a personal pattern is drafted based on the submitted dimensions and proportional relationships.
This pattern establishes the structure and balance of the garment.
For structured garments such as jackets and trousers, the calibration protocol may be applied before production.
Calibration may include guided photo submission or visual verification to ensure structural alignment.
Not all garments require calibration.
After the pattern has been finalized, the garment enters production.
Estimated production time is approximately three weeks from the moment measurements and calibration inputs are approved.
Once the garment has been completed, your personal pattern is securely archived.
Future garments can then be produced using this stored pattern, allowing your wardrobe to expand while maintaining consistent fit.
The objective of this process is simple:
To ensure that each garment follows proportion, structure, and repeatable fit.