
Fit does not end when you leave the boutique.
A beautifully tailored garment will only retain its shape, drape, and comfort when it’s cared for with the same intention with which it was made. Fine materials are alive, they breathe, relax, and respond to the environment. Maintenance, therefore, is not an afterthought; it’s an act of preservation.
At Espace Cannelle, we encourage clients to think of care as a continuation of design, the invisible craftsmanship that happens after the atelier.
Jackets, Coats & Blazers
Knitwear & Heavy Fabrics
Delicate Dresses & Blouses
Seasonal Rotation
At the end of each season, inspect garments before storage. Clean or air them thoroughly; dirt, perfume, and body oils are what attract moths and cause discoloration, not the fabric itself.
Every fine textile behaves differently after wear. Understanding that behavior preserves the original line of the garment.
| Material | Post-Wear Behavior | Care Response |
| Wool / Cashmere | Fibers compress and then rebound with rest. | Let the garment “breathe” 24 hours between wears. Steam lightly to refresh. |
| Silk | Softens with warmth; may crease temporarily. | Hang overnight; wrinkles release naturally. |
| Cotton / Linen | Loosens with wear, tightens after washing. | Iron or steam while damp to restore crispness. |
| Leather / Suede | Molds to the wearer’s shape over time. | Brush gently, condition seasonally, never force-dry. |
Key principle: Never wear the same tailored piece two days in a row. Rotation preserves elasticity, especially in natural fibers.
Luxury garments deserve professional handling.
Home washing should only be attempted when clearly indicated on the care label, and even then, restraint is wisdom.
Dry Cleaning
Spot Cleaning
Steaming vs. Ironing
Fit distortion often begins not with wear, but with cleaning and storage errors.
Atelier note: Re-blocking, the process of gently reshaping garments with steam and form, is used in couture houses annually. It restores drape without altering construction.
Bodies evolve, and so should garments.
Every few years, have your most cherished pieces reviewed by a professional tailor. A minor adjustment, a sleeve shortened, a waist refined, can restore fit while preserving the original craftsmanship.
Re-tailoring is not repair; it’s renewal. Fine garments are built with extra seam allowance precisely for this purpose, because longevity is the ultimate luxury.
Care is not maintenance, it is reverence.
Each time you brush a wool coat, fold a silk blouse, or return a dress to its hanger, you’re engaging in a quiet conversation with craftsmanship. The hands that made it intended it to last. Your care completes that intention.
A garment’s true lifespan is determined not by when it was bought, but by how it is kept.