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ANKARA: The Tuxedo Maker Of Ataturk

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  • ANKARA: The Tuxedo Maker Of Ataturk

    THE TUXEDO MAKER OF ATATURK
    Vercihan Ziflioglu

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Oct 29 2009
    Turkey

    Levon Kordonciyan is the great-grandchild of Ataturk's tuxedo maker.

    The Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review found him on the 86th
    anniversary of the establishment of the Turkish Republic to share
    his family's tale

    The ancestors of Levon Kordonciyan migrated to Istanbul from Rize at
    the beginning of the 1900s. The family settled in the neighborhood
    of Samatya, which was called "The Paris of Istanbul" in those years
    due to its modern look and lifestyle.

    Kordonciyan was born in 1907, according to Ottoman records, and the
    Republic was founded in his early youth, turning a new page for Turkey
    and for Kordonciyan as well.

    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey, prepared a
    special law to send talented youths to foreign countries for training
    and education in various subjects, benefitting hundreds of young
    people. Kordonciyan was among the first group that went abroad,
    traveling to Paris, the heart of fashion, to receive training to
    become a tailor.

    Though the family profession was jewel crafting - their name derived
    from the golden cordons they had been making for generations - being
    a tailor was the young Kordonciyan's dream and he managed to make
    it a reality. After studying in Paris for five years, he returned to
    Istanbul and opened a tailor shop in Sultanhamam, the city's fashion
    center in those days. The day he nailed his signboard to the door,
    a very special customer with his own designs visited Kordonciyan. It
    was Ataturk.

    Young Kordonciyan made history as the person to make Ataturk's first
    tuxedo with tails. All of Ataturk's tuxedos, especially those with
    tails, had the signature of Kordonciyan until the Turkish leader's
    death in 1938. According to the tailor's great-grandson, one of the
    Kordonciyan-brand tuxedos Ataturk wore is on display at the Ataturk
    Museum in Thessaloniki.

    Giant scissors made of train tracks

    The Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review found the grandson of
    Levon Kordonciyan, who shares his name, on the 86th anniversary
    of establishment of the Turkish Republic. The younger Kordonciyan,
    a tailor like his great-grandfather, shared the story of his family
    with Daily News readers.

    Like his predecessor, Kordonciyan makes tuxedos with tails, still
    using the patterns, scissors and rulers he inherited. According to
    Kordonciyan, Ataturk's bowties and shirts were made by Greek tailors,
    while his hats were made by their Jewish colleagues. One of those hats
    is still in his studio. During the interview, Kordonciyan pointed to
    a giant pair of one-meter long scissors and said: "My grandfather
    made these scissors out of train tracks. They were crafting their
    own equipment in those years."

    Historical drawings lost in fire

    Ataturk's drawings and his cloth patterns were burned to ashes along
    with many other historical objects and documents during the events of
    Sept. 6 to 7, 1955. "According to what I heard from my family, our
    house was set on fire during the actions by the demonstrators. The
    historical documents inside were burned to ashes at that time," said
    Kordonciyan. "It is so sad that my grandfather's gold-foiled diploma
    from Paris was burned in the fire too."

    The events of that Sept. 6 and 7, a black mark in the history of
    Turkey, were caused by the tension arising from the Cyprus issue
    between Turkey and Greece, developments that made the public very
    tense. When daily Istanbul Express published the news that the house
    where Ataturk was born in Thessaloniki had been bombed, violent mobs
    hit the streets. The Greek, Armenian and Jewish populations and their
    belongings became a target for the mob. Schools, churches, synagogues,
    hospitals, houses and stores were set on fire. It was later understood
    that the whole thing was a set up, but the damage was already done.

    A gift to the White House

    The Kordonciyan family was lucky; even though their house was burnt
    down, they survived. Moreover, some of the things inherited from
    the elder Kordonciyan remained intact after the attacks, which hit
    their studio too. "The reason I do my work in the best sense today
    is the patterns I inherited from my grandfather. I still work with
    his scissors and patterns," said the younger Kordonciyan, adding that
    his grandfather died in 1953.

    "I saw myself working together with my grandfather in my dreams;
    we create models together. You see, design is in my life 24 hours a
    day," said Kordonciyan, who makes tuxedos with and without tails for
    high-level bureaucrats, just as his grandfather did. The tuxedos of
    Turgut Ozal, the eighth president of Turkey, carried his signature.

    Kordonciyan said he had prepared a special box and sent it to the
    White House for U.S. President Barack Obama's inauguration. The box
    contained a tuxedo Kordonciyan made, cuff links, silk socks, a belt
    and a bow tie. Kordonciyan also made tuxedos for Hollywood actor
    Bruce Willis and the James Bond movie "Casino Royale."

    Tuxedo made in one day, without taking measurements

    Kordonciyan said he does not need to take measurements to make a tuxedo
    for someone; a look is enough for him. "I need one day only to make
    a whole tuxedo flawlessly," he said, noting that he is very precise,
    from the cloth of the tuxedo to the shirt to wear with it.

    "The collars of a good tuxedo with tails should be satin," he said.

    "The bowtie and belt should be of the same satin and the buttons of
    the shirt should never be visible. The socks have to be silk."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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