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UN ITED STATES D E P A R TM EN T O F L A B O R

BUR EAU O F L A B O R STATISTICS

Maurice J. Tobin, Secretary

Ewan Clague, Commissioner

In cooperation with V E TE R A N S A D M IN IS T R A T IO N

OCCUPATIONAL OUTLOOK SERIES




-

Bulletin No. 1010




EMPLOYMENT OUTLOOK IN

MEN'S TAILORED CLOTHING INDUSTRY

Bulletin N o . 1 0 1 0
U N IT E D S TA T E S D E P A R T M E N T O F L A B O R
Maurice J. Tobin, S ecreta ry
B U R E A U O F L A B O R S T A T IS T IC S
Ewan C la g u e , Com m issioner
In cooperation with

V E T E R A N S A D M IN I S T R A T I O N

For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Government Printing O ffice, Washington 25, D. C.




Price 25 cents

Letter of Transmittal

U nited States D epartment of L abor,
B ureau of L abor Statistics,

Washington, D. C., January 10, 1951.
The Secretary of L abor:
I have the honor to transmit herewith a report on the employment outlook in the men’s
tailored clothing industry. This is one of a series of occupational studies conducted in the
Bureau’s Occupational Outlook Branch for use in schools, colleges, offices of the Veterans
Administration, local offices of the State employment services affiliated with the United
States Employment Service, and other agencies engaged in vocational counseling of veterans,
young people in schools, and others interested in choosing a field of work. The study was
financed largely by the Veterans Administration, and the report was originally published
as a Veterans Administration pamphlet for use in vocational rehabilitation and education
activities.
The study was prepared by Stuart A. Pettingill with the assistance of Vincent H. Arkell.
The Bureau wishes to acknowledge the generous assistance received from unions, trade associa­
tions, clothing companies, and from other Government agencies.
E wan C lague, Commissioner.

Hon. M aurice J. T obin,

Secretary of Labor.

II



Contents
The industry:
Introduction_____________________________________________________________________________
How clothing is m ade____________________________________________________________________
The clothing’workers_____________________________________________________________________
Working conditions and earnings__________________________________________________________
Unionization_________________________________________________________________________
Working conditions and hazards_______________________________________________________
Vacations, pensions, and other employment benefits_____________________________________
H ours and earnings__________________________________________________________________
Em ploym ent outlook_____________________________________________________________________
P ast trends in production and em ploym ent____________________________________________
The dem and for men’s clothing_______________________________________________________
Changes in technology_______________________________________________________________
Seasonality__________________________________________________________________________
Em ploym ent opportunities____________________________________________________________
How to enter the in d u stry ____________________________
Opportunities in individual occupations:
A dm inistrative positions__________________________________________________________________
M aterial buyers_____________________________________________________________________
Sales positions--------------------------------------Production jobs______________________________________________________________________
O ther adm inistrative positions________________________________________________________
Clerical and other office workers___________________________________________________________
Designers and patternm akers______________________________________________________________
Designers____________________________________________________________________________
P attern m ak ers_______________________________________________________________________
P atte rn graders______________________________________________________________________
Cloth processing jobs_____________________________________________________________________
Testers or laboratory personnel_______________________________________________________
Cloth examiners_____________________________________________________________________
Spongers____________________________________________________________________________
Cutting room jobs_______________________________________________________________________
Spreaders, markers, and cu tters_______________________________________________________
F itte rs______________________________________________________________________________
Assemblers and ticketers______________________________________________________________
T ailors__________________________________________________________________________________
Sewing jobs______________________________________________________________________________
M achine sewing jobs_________________________________________________________________
H and sewing jobs____________________________________________________________________
Pressing jobs_____________________________________________________________________________
Miscellaneous clothing jobs__________________
M aintenance, shipping and storage, and custodial jo b s______________________________________
M aintenance jobs____________________________________________________________________
Shipping and storage jobs____________________________________________________
Custodial jobs_______________________________________________________________________




Paae
1
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4
5
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15
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III

Contents— Continued
A P P E N D IX E S
Page

I.
II.

Schools offering job train in g ______________________________________________________________
Straight-tim e average hourly earnings in m en’s tailored clothing m anufacturing: August-Septem ber
1948___________________________________________________________________________________

29
31

CHARTS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

M en’s clothing production centers___________________________________________________________
Production flow in m anufacturing m en’s suits________________________________________________
V ariation in piecework hourly earnings______________________________________________________
E m ploym ent in m en’s clothing______________________________________________________________
Seasonal p a tte rn of retail sales of m en’s clothing______________________________________________
Comparison of seasonal variation in production of m en’s clothing by type of establishm ent_______

2
3
8
9
11
12

TABLES
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

IV

Machine sewing occupations—average straight-tim e hourly earnings____________________________
H and sewing occupations—average straight-tim e hourly earnings______________________________
Pressing occupations—average straight-tim e hourly earnings___________________________________
Miscellaneous clothing jobs— average straight-tim e hourly earnings____________________________
M aintenance occupations—average straight-tim e hourly earnings______________________________
Shipping and storage occupations—average straight-tim e hourly earnings______________________




24
25
26
27
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28

Employment Outlook In Men's Tailored Clothing Industry
The Industry
In tro d u ctio n

The men’s tailored clothing industry produces
one of the necessities of life and clothes over 50
million American men and boys. The annual out­
put of men’s and boys’ suits, sportcoats, topcoats,
and overcoats is valued at one and a quarter billion
dollars and the industry provides jobs for almost
150,000 workers.
Men’s clothing has not always been made in fac­
tories. Until the Civil War, men’s clothing was
largely made to measure in the home or by profes­
sional tailors. Keady-made clothing grew out of
the sale of second-hand clothing to sailors when
during slack seasons tailors began making up
crude garments which they sold to sailors’ slop­
shops. The demand for slaves’ clothing and the
gold rush o f 1849 slowly nurtured the infant in­
dustry until the Civil War. However, sewing was
still done in the home and largely by hand. This
method of manufacture could not meet the demand
for soldiers’ uniforms and the factory system
emerged during the Civil War.
For a long time, ready-made clothing was looked
down upon as being fit only for sailors and labor­
ers. Although the Army had worked out standard
sizes which were later applied to civilian clothing,
the garments were still crudely made and often illfitting. For many years, sales were largely con­
fined to the rural West but there was a steady
improvement in quality, and public acceptance.
In 1890, ready-made clothing had already equaled
custom-made in volume and, by the end of World
War I, had largely replaced custom-made.
The sewing machine came into general use in the
industry during the Civil War, and the
following decades witnessed increasing mecha­
nization wuth the introduction of electric cutting
knives, steam presses, and other improvements.
Along with increased mechanization came indus­
trial engineering and scientific management which



enabled greater output per worker and a better
product. But, mechanization of the men’s clothing
industry was never carried to the extent achieved
in the mass-production industries since the indus­
try does not lend itself to complete mechanization.
Four types of establishments predominate in the
men’s tailored clothing industry. Establishments
which perform all manufacturing processes on
their own premises are known as “ inside shops.”
They employ about 60 percent of the industry’s
workers. A few of the largest inside shops own
chains of retail stores which market their entire
output. Although such manufacturers make up
a small proportion of the inside shops, they account
for a quarter of the industry’s output. Another
type of establishment purchases and cuts cloth and
delivers it to other firms which make up the gar­
ments for an agreed price. Since these concerns
subcontract most of the manufacturing, they
provide few jobs. The establishments which do the
manufacturing on contract are known as “contract
shops.” Contract shops employ about 30 percent
of the industry’s workers and are located chiefly
in the New York, Philadelphia, and Balti­
more areas. Tailor-to-the-trade firms make gar­
ments to individual order and do not maintain
stocks. This part of the industry employs fewer
than a tenth of all workers.
Men’s tailored clothing is manufactured by
medium- and small-sized firms. Almost half of
the industry’s workers are in firms employing
fewer than 250 workers. There are almost 2,000
firms in the industry and no single company em­
ploys over 5 percent of the industry’s workers.
Manufacturers can enter this industry with very
little capital. The equipment required is rela­
tively inexpensive and a ready supply of raw ma­
terials can be obtained, often on easy credit terms.
As a result, the industry is highly competitive.
Employment is heavily concentrated in New
York State and, to a lesser extent, in Pennsylvania,

1

Illinois, New Jersey, Ohio, Maryland, and Massa­
chusetts. These seven States provide employment
for more than four out of five workers in the in­
dustry. Within these States, the industry is fur­
ther concentrated in metropolitan areas. For ex­
ample, a quarter o f all the employees are located
in the New York City metropolitan area. Other
important centers are Philadelphia, Chicago,
Baltimore, and Rochester. The relative impor­
tance of these centers is shown in chart 1.
CHART I

M e n 's Clothing Production Centers
NUMBER OF MEN'S ANO STUDENTS' WOOL GARMENTS CU T, 1947

NEW YORK
PHILADELPHIA
BALTIMORE
CHICAGO
ROCHESTER
CLEVELAN D
BOSTON
S T. LOUIS
CINCINNATI
LOS AN GELES
MINNEAPOLISST. PAUL
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS

SOURCE: U. S. BUREAU OF CENSUS

How C lo t h in g Is M a d e
Production methods vary from firm to firm for
various reasons. In general, the large plants use a
greater proportion of machinery than small ones
and higher quality clothing requires more hand­
work and fewer machine operations. Produc­
tion is subdivided into many operations or sec­
tions where workers in factory buildings perform
highly specialized tasks with extreme dexterity.
Over 200 distinct operations are required in mak­
ing a suit and some manufacturers carry the divi­
sion of labor to that extent. Small firms fre­
quently combine several operations into a single
job. Although inside shops make a wide variety
of garments, some contract shops specialize on a
single garment or even on a single operation.
2




Despite these variations, there is a typical manu­
facturing process which can be described in gen­
eral terms for a large plant. Chart 2 illustrates
some of the major operations in making a suit.
The manufacturing begins with the designer who
designs a suit and has a sample garment made.
I f the sample garment meets the approval o f the
designer and the company’s executives, a pattern
is made by a patternmaker. This master pattern
is then made into various size patterns by pattern
graders and the completed patterns are sent with
instructions to the cutting room.
Meanwhile, the purchasing department has
bought the piece goods and cloth, and samples have
been tested in the laboratory. After the cloth has
been examined and measured, and all flaws have
been marked, it is sent to the sponging room
where it is pre-shrunk so that it will not change
shape or texture after the garment is made. It
is then dried, folded, or rolled, and sent to the
cutting room. Small firms often subcontract these
operations.
The cloth is stretched out on long cutting
tables in several layers or “ plies”—the number
of plies depending upon the quality and num­
ber of garments being made. Using patterns as
guides, the cloth is marked and cut. Cloth
cuttings are then prepared for sewing by fitters
who locate the pockets, match the pattern, etc.
Then, the garment pieces are sorted into bundles,
with identifying tickets attached, and routed to
the various sewing sections where the garment is
assembled. Here the garment begins to take form
as it passes through a succession of highly special­
ized operations. Coats, pants, and vests are
usually assembled in separate departments.
Assembly consists of a series of sewing and
pressing operations, with each worker assigned a
specific task. Some baste linings, others sew
tapes around parts which must hold their shape,
or join pieces together. Some work by hand but
others use a variety of high speed machinery which
cuts holes, turns corners, trims edges, adds tapes,
etc.
During these operations, the garment has fre­
quent pressings which help in sewing it together
and giving it shape. And, from time to time,
it is inspected for proper workmanship.
A few of the more important operations per­
formed in the making of a suit coat illustrate the

CHART Z

Production

Flow

in

Manufacturing

M e n 's

Suits

PURCHASING
(Yard a Piece Goods)
CLOTH S H IP P E D FROM
CLO TH M A N U FA CTU R E R S

CLOTH RECEIVJNG
TESTING
SPONGING
EXAMINING
SPREADING
MARKING
CUTTING
FITTING
ASSEMBLING
TICKETING
C O A T S -* —

BODY FRONTS

POCKETS

BODY BACKS

BODY
LIN IN G

"

r.tO TH PARTS _____
FO R COATS

COLLARS
(3 L a y e r s )

SLEEVES
(Outer)

many specialized operations required in manufac­
turing. To begin with, the pieces which will be­
come the coat fronts have their interliners stitched
and slits are cut and stitched for pockets. Then,
the pockets, which have been trimmed and lined
in another section, are attached and pressed.
Meanwhile, the backs of the coat have been joined
and their seams piped to prevent unraveling. The
fronts and backs of the coat are now joined, the
armholes and shoulders are taped to preserve the
garment’s shape, and the side seams are pressed.
By this time, the garment can be recognized as a
suit coat.
The coat front lapels are now pressed back.
Then, the facings which form the lapels are re­
ceived from another section with the coat’s lining,
and inside pockets already basted (temporary
sewing) to them. The facings are joined to the



--------------- -------- C LO TH PAffTo

•■OR TR O USER S

SLEEVES
(L i n in g )

BACKS

“

— ► -T R O U S E R S

LOOPS

POC KET S

FLYS

FRONTS

coat and the lining is permanently sewn in.
Meanwhile, in another section the collars have
been shaped, trimmed, sewed, and pressed and are
now joined to the coat. Still another section has
sewed, lined, and pressed the sleeves. Shoulder
padding is now added to the coat, the shoulder
seams sewed up, and the sleeves sewed in the coat.
These are complicated operations involving bast­
ing, pressing, and sewing.
Although the coat appears almost finished, it
still must go through several additional opera­
tions. The felling department sews together all
the unjoined parts and removes the basting. But­
tonholes are made, the coat is cleaned and
pressed, and buttons are sewed on. A t this stage,
the coat receives its final pressing and is put with
the completed pants and vest. A final inspection
is made and the suit is readied for shipment.

3

These are the pieces of cloth cut to shape that are a ssem bled into the finished suit.

The C lo t h in g W o rk e rs

The clothing industry traditionally employed
immigrant labor until large-scale immigration
ceased. Although some displaced persons are en­
tering the industry, it is now dependent upon
native-born Americans for its labor supply.
Men’s clothing manufacturing requires fairly
skilled workers. Notwithstanding that a third of
all employees are machine operators, some are
highly skilled, and many must handle and shape
the material as well as sew it. Much of the work
is highly specialized and is performed at high
speed. Because most skilled workers are paid by
piecework, they are reluctant to change their type
of job since this causes a loss in earnings during
the retraining period. As a result, clothing
workers tend to stay at the same type of job al­
though they may move from plant to plant and
from city to city. This occupational immobility
reduces the opportunity for advancement and
makes it difficult for clothing workers to find em­
ployment outside the clothing industries. The
clothing worker tends to stay in the clothing in­
dustries through good years and bad.
As a result of the low turn-over, the present
labor force has grown old on the job. Few man­
ufacturing industries have as high a proportion
of older workers as the men’s clothing industry.

4



In 1916, an estimated 40 percent of all employees
were over 50 years of age, which is unusual in an
industry where women predominate. . Three out
of every five male employees were over 50, and
one out of every four women was past 50. On the
other hand, only 10 percent of all employees were
under 25 years of age, and most of them were
women. The unusually high average age of the
male workers means that many will retire or die
in the next several years. Since men have not
entered the industry in any numbers in recent
years, women have been increasingly replacing
them. Some jobs, however, are traditionally
filled by men instead of by women.
Women have outnumbered men in the industry
for some time. In December 1949 women made
up 61 percent of the total employed, and the pro­
portion is steadily increasing. Over 70 percent
of the workers who entered the industry between
1936 and 1946 were women, and a surprising num­
ber of them were over 40 years of age. There are
marked regional differences in the proportion of
women employed. In New York, the largest man­
ufacturing center, there are more men than women
workers, but the proportion of women is slowly
increasing. In the other eastern cities and in the
Middle West, over two-thirds of all workers are
women.

The proportion of women varies widely among
occupations. Cloth processing, designing and
patternmaking, cutting and marking, and tailor­
ing jobs are held almost entirely by men, but
women predominate in machine sewing, hand sew­
ing, and miscellaneous jobs like those of the work
distributors and thread trimmers.
W o r k in g C o n d itio n s a n d E a r n in g s
Unionization

Some of the earliest unions in America were in
the clothing trades. Sporadic and short-lived
associations of tailors were organized in eastern
cities before the War of 1812. With the emergence
of the men’s tailored clothing industry after the
Civil War, loosely knit craft unions appeared
under the banner of the Knights of Labor. These
unions were soon replaced by the United GarmentWorkers of America organized in 1891 by the
American Federation of Labor. In 1914, the
Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America was
organized and rapidly became the dominant organ­
ization in the industry—the position it holds
today.
Union organization was largely stimulated by
the deplorable working conditions prevalent in the
industry at the turn of the century when successive
waves of immigrants were exploited under work­
ing conditions far below the standard even of that
period. The early years of the twentieth century
witnessed a series of bitter strikes which reached
a climax in Chicago in 1910, and New York in
1912. But out of these struggles emerged a col­
lective bargaining machinery which developed
into one of the most significant experiments in
industrial relations in American history and has
kept this industry almost free from strikes for
many years.
The Amalgamated Clothing Workers of Amer­
ica represents over 95 percent of the workers in the
industry and only a few inside shops remain
unorganized. The union has always been organ­
ized on industrial lines and was one of the original
founders of the CIO. Locals are established in all
o f the principal garment centers. Some locals are
organized on occupational lines and contain
all of the workers in a single occupation in the
area, whereas others include a wide group of
occupations.

2
924049°— 51


Se w in g in the shoulder p a dd ing.

Under the terms of the contracts between cloth­
ing manufacturers and the union, the industry
operates under a closed-shop agreement with a
check-off for dues. This means that employers
must hire union members in good standing if any
are available and must be responsible for the
collection of union dues. The union agrees to
furnish the employer with union members. When
the union is unable to furnish union workers,
employers may hire nonunion workers, provided
they will join the union within a reasonable period
of time. In some areas clerical workers also are
required to join the union after completing their
probationary period, although employers may
hire them in the open market.
Membership in the union is open to everyone,
although in some occupations it may be restricted
from time to time, depending upon economic con­
ditions. The union accepts men and women on an
equal basis and workers of all races and nation­
alities. Union dues, which vary from local to local,
average about $2 a month. Initiation fees are
under $10 and special assessments must be
approved by a majority of the union membership.
Seniority, or the practice of laying off workers
in the reverse order of their length of service in

5

a plant or industry, is not widely used in the men’s
clothing industry. However, seniority governs
the laying off of clerical personnel, and in severe
periods o f business stagnation, the laying off o f all
personnel. Unless business conditions become
severe enough to require a permanent reduction in
the industry’s labor force, work is shared among
workers in the same plant or between plants of the
same concern. This means that as soon as a new
worker completes his 6 weeks’ probationary period,
he acquires tenure and has the same rights as any
other worker. It also means the number of work­
ers “ attached” to a plant in relation to its normal
needs has a direct effect upon the earnings of all
workers. In slack seasons or during business re­
cessions, workers in the industry work only part
time, but as long as their plant operates, they have
jobs and some earnings.
The men’s clothing industry is noted for its
many years o f industrial peace. Workers going
into the industry can expect to lose very little time
from strikes or other work stoppage. Successful
labor-management relations are the result of the
willingness of employers and union alike to try
to solve their problems together, and o f the devel­
opment o f compulsory arbitration and industry­
wide collective bargaining. Industry-wide collec­
tive bargaining in the men’s clothing industry is
a natural outgrowth of an economic structure with
many small, competitive producers concentrated
in a few major markets. In an industry where
capital invested per worker is less than 6 months’
wages, any substantial difference in wage rates
causes a flow o f work from one area to another.
In the men’s clothing industry, however, the re­
sulting insecurity to employers and employees
has been largely eliminated by adjusting wage
rates to equalize the manufacturers’ labor costs
insofar as possible throughout the country. In
contract shop areas, specifications were established
for the four lower grades of clothing and total
labor costs were set for each grade. Since the
adoption o f this practice, the migration of the
industry from the old established clothing centers
has almost ceased. There has also been a stabili­
zation of the amount o f work in each shop and
contractors bidding for business no longer forces
wage rates down.
The union engages in a wide range of educa­
tional, cultural, banking and credit, and other ac­
Digitized6for FRASER


tivities. It has prepared correspondence courses
to further the education of its members and it
owns two banks which make small loans to union
members at low rates of interest. The union also
has a cooperative housing program which has
been greatly expanded since the end o f W orld
War II.
Working Conditions and Hazards
The notorious sweatshops which plagued men’s
clothing manufacturing a generation ago have been
replaced by working conditions which are among
the best in all industry. Clothing manufacturing
is essentially a clean trade without the dust, grease,
or noise present in many manufacturing occupa­
tions. Working conditions vary by type o f plant
and by occupation. Large integrated manufac­
turers and “ inside” shops are usually located in
modern factory buildings with ample space and
good lighting. Some o f these plants have cafe­
terias and even clinics with trained nurses on duty.
But, a large part of the men’s clothing industry
is still located in older clothing centers where
working conditions are less satisfactory. Smaller
plants in these areas are generally more crowded
and less attractive than more modern and spacious
plants. Because some clothing processes generate
considerable heat and humidity, special ventila­
tion is required to maintain comfortable working
conditions. This is often difficult to accomplish
in old buildings.
As in any piecework industry where workers’
earnings depend upon their speed, the working
pace is rapid. In addition to fast tempo, many
tasks are extremely monotonous but this is true
of almost all manufacturing industries.
Fatal injuries are rare in clothing manufactur­
ing and disabling injuries are less prevalent than
in most other industries. Needle punctures and
hand injuries are about the only occupational
hazards in most machine occupations. Cutting is
about the only occupation in which permanently
disabling injuries occur, although pressers are sub­
ject to occasional burns and other hazards.
Vacations, Pensions, and Other Benefits
Workers in the men’s tailored clothing industry
receive a week’s vacation with pay if employed
less than 3 years, and 2 weeks with pay when em­
ployed over 3 years. It is customary to close the

plants during vacation, usually during the first 2
weeks in July. In addition to paid vacations, em­
ployees receive six paid holidays each year.
The men’s clothing industry was among the
first American industries to adopt social-security
benefits such as unemployment compensation and
old-age pension programs. With the adoption of
State unemployment insurance, these programs
wxere converted to provide sickness, accident, ma­
ternity, old-age, and death benefits which were
extended to the entire industry during World
War II. These benefits (except in Chicago, where
payments are higher than elsewhere) are entirely
supported by employers who contribute 5 percent
o f their payroll to a fund established for the pur­
pose. In Philadelphia, employers contribute an
additional three-fourths of 1 percent to maintain
a medical clinic for their employees. Chicago and
New York employers have agreed to finance simi­
lar medical centers.
The industry’s social-insurance program pro­
vides the following benefits to its workers with­
out charge:
(1) A $500 life insurance policy.
(2) Accident and health insurance which pays
workers $15 a week for a maximum of 26 weeks
a year when they are urfable to work because of
sickness or injury.
(3) A hospital plan which pays workers $6 a
day for a maximum of 62 days a year when they
are hospitalized because of injury or illness.
(4) Surgical benefits up to $150 are paid to­
ward any operation.
(5) A pension of $50 a month is paid to workers
over 65 who wish to retire. This pension is in
addition to the worker’s Federal Social-Security
benefits and the maximum total pension which a
worker may receive has been set at $116 a month.
Any worker who has spent 20 years in the industry
and has belonged to the union for 10 years is
eligible, provided his last employer contributed
to the fund during the last 2 years of his employ­
ment.
Hours and Earnings
Hourly earnings in the men’s tailored clothing
industry are close to the average for all manu­
facturing. Although average hourly earnings
during the busy 1947-48 season were above the
manufacturing average, they fell behind in 1949
and in the first 4 months of 1950 were still slightly



below the average. Since men’s clothing workers
have a shorter workweek than workers in most
other industries, their average weekly earnings are
below the average. In the first 4 months of 1950.
average weekly earnings in the men’s clothing in­
dustry were about 11 percent below the manufac­
turing average and, because this is a seasonal
industry, there may be even greater disparity in
annual earnings. But the additional benefits
which men’s clothing workers receive from their
industry or union Should be weighed against
those provided by other industries, because they
may be worth more to the individual than the
difference in earnings.
Earnings in this industry vary widely by occu­
pation (Appendix I I ) . In 1948, average hourly
earnings in selected occupations varied between
$0.73 and $2.45 an hour. The first increase in
wage rates since then became effective November
20, 1950, when pieceworkers were given a 12
cents an hour wage increase and weekly workers
a flat weekly increase of $5. Highly skilled craft
jobs like cutting, fitting, tailoring, and finish
pressing pay well, whereas less skilled machine
and hand sewing jobs bring less money. Men
generally predominate in the higher paid jobs but
there are exceptions. Where men and women do
the same job, men have substantially higher earn­
ings. Since most of these jobs are piecework
which pays the same rate to women as to men,
the difference is due to the greater speed and
endurance of the men. Workers in contract shops
earn about the same as those in inside shops but
workers in the New York, Philadelphia, and Los
Angeles areas average higher earnings than those
in the rest o f the country.
In any piecework occupation, employees differ
widely in their speeds. Some workers are unable
to exceed the minimum wage whereas exceptional
workers may earn double the average. Chart 3
illustrates the wide variation in two typical oc­
cupations. Since the ability to perform satisfac­
tory work at high speeds has a profound effect on
total earnings, persons contemplating entering the
men’s clothing industry should not enter piece­
work occupations unless they have at least average
manual dexterity.
Persons with exceptional
ability to work with their hands, however, should
consider this industry, since they may be able to
earn more than they could in straight-time indus­
tries with higher average earnings.

y2

7

CHART 3

Variation in Piece W ork Hourly Earnings
NEW

YORK

C IT Y ,

1948

Percent o f W orkers

Percent o f Workers

Percent of Workers

Percent of W orkers

A V E R A G E S T R A I G H T -T I M E

UNIT ED S T A T ES DEP ARTMENT OF LA BO R
BUREAU OF LA BO R S T A T I S T I C S

8 FRASER
Digitized for


H O U R L Y E A R N IN G S

E m p lo y m e n t O u t lo o k

Past Trends in Production and Employment
Men’s clothing production is greatly influenced
by general economic conditions. Despite the
growth in population, men bought substantially
less clothing during the depression nineteen
thirties than during the prosperous twenties. In
the prosperous years following World War II,
more men’s tailored clothing was purchased than
ever before, but production shifted to lighter
clothing and sportswear. The output of men’s
suits in the best postwar year— 1947—was only 13
percent above 1941. Between 1941 and 1947, how­
ever, the output of sport coats trebled and separate
dress trousers doubled. Men’s clothing firms are
shifting production to meet popular demand for
these items and the production of sportswear is
becoming a substantial portion of the industry’s
business.
Employment closely parallels production. Men
buy more of their clothes in the spring and fall
and this results in month-to-month variations in
hours of work and in employment. The men’s
clothing industry is especially hard hit during pe­
riods of depression when men put off buying
clothing as long as possible. Even those fortunate
enough to remain employed work only part time.
About the same number of workers are em­
ployed in the industry today as in 1923. Employ­
ment declined steadily between 1923 and 1933 and
then recovered slowly until higher incomes and
large military orders boosted it to an all-time peak
in 1941 and 1942. After 1942, employment again
declined. (See chart 4.) Notwithstanding that
the industry’s 1947 output was considerably
greater than in 1941, it was produced by 10 per­
cent fewer workers. The more stable level of pro­
duction in 1947 resulted in a greater output per
worker, although increased efficiency was a con­
tributing factor. In the following year, the in­
dustry returned to more nearly normal conditions
with labor shortages easing and seasonal varia­
tions reappearing. Output declined slightly, but
average employment increased. Both employ­
ment and output declined in 1949, both rose again
in 1950.
The Demand for Men’s Clothing
Although clothing is one of the necessities of
life, men’s clothing expenditures may be more



sharply expanded or contracted in a given year
than almost any other essential. Individuals are
equipped with wardrobes of varying sizes, which,
being durable, can be “ stretched” when other de­
mands on the pay check are more pressing. It is
only natural that changes in income should limit
or expand the amount spent for clothing. During
the past 21 years, the American economy has had
many ups and downs but national income availa­
ble for consumption has increased at an average
rate of over 6 percent a year. Future variations
may be expected but, in the long run, incomes
should continue to increase and the demand for
men’s clothing should increase with them.
The distribution o f national income is almost as
important as the amount. Consumer purchase
studies have shown that middle-income groups
spend a higher proportion of their income on
clothing than do other income groups. Although
individuals spend an increasing proportion of
their total income on clothing as their incomes
increase beyond a certain point this proportion
tends to decline as they begin to save an increasing
proportion o f their income. The present trend
toward a more even distribution of the national
income among individuals should strengthen the
demand for men’s clothing.
Urban families spend larger amounts on cloth­
ing than do rural families. Urban and rural nonCHART 4

Employment in M e n's Clothing

1939 '40

'41 '42

'43

'44

'45

'46

'47

'48 '49 1950

First
§ months

UNI TED S TAT ES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
BUREAU OF LABOR S T A T I S T I C S

9

farm population has been increasing steadily but
farm population has actually declined. There is
every expectation that this trend will continue.
During the past 40 years, there has also been a
continuous shift in male workers to occupations
and professions which require the wearing of busi­
ness suits to work. Both of these trends should
help keep the demand for men’s clothing at high
levels.
More important is the increasing number of
young men who in a few years will reach the age
when they will become customers of the men’s
clothing industry. The heavy birth rate of the
war years will begin to be felt in another 5 years,
with the largest group of male youths in the his­
tory of the country reaching the age of 15 during
the 1955-65 decade. The needs of these new cus­
tomers in the industry will not be as easily de­
ferred as those o f older men. Moreover, the
majority of young men spend a larger proportion
of their incomes on clothing than do older men
who have families to support.
On the adverse side, there appears to be a slow
long-run decline in the per capita purchases of
men’s clothing. Men’s clothing offers a wider
range o f substitution of lower priced items than
almost any other commodity and men can adjust
to price increases or reduced clothing budgets
without depriving themselves of clothing. Prog­
ress in clothing manufacturing and merchandising
has improved the quality of clothing in the lower
priced lines and has enabled more men to appear
well dressed. As a result, a declining proportion
o f disposable income is being spent on men’s cloth­
ing and a greater proportion on heavy consumer
durable goods and other commodities. Con­
tinuing competition from automobiles, television
sets, and other goods is likely to be intensified.
The lack of rapid style changes in men’s cloth­
ing enables men to wear their clothing longer than
women and thus limits demand. Over the past 40
years, there has been a steady trend toward lighter
clothing and more informal dress. The latter
could reduce the demand for men’s clothing to a
considerable extent. Sportswear, which is of
fairly recent origin, has begun to replace suits for
office and street wear and informal occasions.
Consequently, there has been a shift in demand
from suits to sportswear rather than any general
decline.
10




Greater durability and less frequent style
changes make the demand for men’s clothing more
sensitive to price changes than does the demand
for other apparel. However, the demand for
men’s outerwear is less sensitive to price changes
than to income changes. Men’s clothing prices
generally move fairly closely with the general
price level and should have little long-run effect on
total demand.
The factors tending to increase the demand for
men’s clothing will probably be largely offset by
increasing competition from other industries for
the consumer’s dollar. Demand should remain
relatively stable during the next few years and
then slowly increase with the increase in the adult
male population.
Changes in Technology
The men’s tailored clothing industry has gone
through several periods of mechanization but, for
the most part, progress has been slow and gradual.
Recent mechanization has been in the form of
minor improvements on existing machinery rather
than in startling innovations. Although the
industry uses a great deal o f specialized machinery,
it is still largely a hand industry using skilled
labor. Unless a completely new technology is
developed, future improvements are likely to be
minor.
The small size of firms has limited the industry’s
research and development. Moreover, manage­
ment has largely come from the business side of
the industry rather than from the engineering
profession and has tended to concentrate on such
problems as marketing or the buying of materials.
But, the chief barrier to further mechanization is
the industry itself. Firms are small, raw mate­
rials are variable, and the final product has end­
less shapes, shades, designs, and sizes. Such au
industry does not readily lend itself to mechani­
zation with its consequent replacement of skilled
labor.
Recent technological improvements have been
due to improved organization and scientific man­
agement rather than to mechanical improvements.
Since workers spend more time handling mate­
rials than in operating machines, improvements
in organization, specialization, and flow of work
offer greater opportunities for reducing costs and
increasing productivity than do machine improve­
ments.

During the past 30 years, the hourly output per
worker has gradually risen although less than in
many mass-production industries. Further in­
creases in productivity may be expected in the
future, but it is doubtful if they will materially
reduce the level of employment in the industry.

CHART 5

Seasonal Pattern of Retail Sales
of M e n ‘s Clothing
Avera ge

1940- 41=100

A

J

INDEX

Seasonality

Seasonal variations in production and employ­
ment are more pronounced in this industry than in
almost any other manufacturing industry Even
in the most prosperous years retail sales of men’s
clothing are highly seasonal since men generally
buy their clothing in the spring and fall (see chart
5). In bad years, however, when retailers make
“ hand-to-mouth” orders, this seasonality is car­
ried over into manufacturing wdth a vengeance;
in good years the seasons spread over each other
and the drop in sales is much less pronounced.
Although seasonal variations in production and
employment are always more marked in poor years
than in good business years, they affect some types
of manufacturers more than others. ( See chart 6.)
Tailor-to-trade establishments always exhibit a
wide variation in production because they manu­
facture to customers’ orders. In prosperous
years, “ contract” shops and “ inside” shops have
fairly stable production. In bad years, both types
o f manufacturers have wide variations in produc­
tion and unemployment. Contract shops, how­
ever, are so severely affected that they produce
most of their output during a few months and
virtually suspend operations for the rest of the
year. Integrated manufacturers with greater re­
sources and assured markets through their own
stores are able to maintain more stable produc­
tion and employment than any other type of cloth­
ing manufacturer, regardless of business condi­
tions. Therefore, new workers entering the in­
dustry will find more stable employment with
large integrated manufacturers than with any
other type.
Since hourly earnings are substantially the same
in all types o f shops, workers can expect, over a
period of years, to average higher annual earn­
ings in integrated and inside shops. Neverthe­
less those who plan careers in the men’s clothing
industry must expect periods of unemployment or
reduced earnings each year and prolonged periods
of unemployment during business recessions.
This should be considered when comparing pro­



J
BUREAU

F

M

M

OF LA B OR S T A T I S T I C S

J

A

S

O

N

D

RE CON VE RS ION

spective earnings with those of other industries.
Employees must use earnings from busy seasons
and prosperous years to tide them over slack
seasons and recession years.
During the prosperous years following W orld
War II, only minor seasonal variations in em­
ployment were experienced until 1949. Even
then, they were less severe than in prewar years.
Both industry and labor are attempting to reduce
seasonal variations in production. It is doubtful
if seasonal variations will ever be as extreme as
in the prewar period but it is equally doubtful if
they will ever be completely eliminated. Any
reduction in seasonal variation will tend to reduce,
to some degree, the size of the labor force required
by the industry. However, no material effects
upon employment are expected from this source
in the near future.
Employment Opportunities
A study o f the factors affecting employment
indicates no substantial change. Rather, it sug­
gests that the number of jobs in this industry will
remain relatively stable, fluctuating from an aver­
age level of about 150,000, depending upon the
season of the year and general business conditions.

11

CHART 6

Comparison of Seasonal Variation in Production of Men’s Clothing
BY

TYP E

OF

E S T A B L IS H M E N T

Average Monthly Production for Each Year and Establishment * 100
IN DEX

IN DEX

220
200

180
160
140
120
100

80
60
40
20

0
J

F

M

A

M

J

J

U N IT E D S T A T E S D E P A R T M E N T OF L A B O R
B U R E A U OF L A B O R S T A T I S T I C S

Digitized for
12FRASER


A

S

0

N

D J F

So urce:

M

A

O F F IC E

M

J

OF W A R

J

A

S

M O B IL IZ A T IO N

O

N

D

AND

R E C O N V E R S IO N

This is the long-run outlook. In the immediate
future, employment may rise somewhat as a result
of larger defense orders for uniforms.
Since total employment is not expected to in­
crease in the long run, employment opportunities
for new workers depend almost entirely on the
replacement o f present workers. Turn-over, how­
ever, is lower in this industry than in industry
generally, except during seasonal peaks. Skills
acquired in the men’s clothing industry are fre­
quently of no benefit in other industries, and
workers may encounter difficulty in shifting to
other apparel industries or even to other firms
making widely separated grades of men’s cloth­
ing. Although skilled workers may change em­
ployers frequently w ithin the industry, they rarely
leave it for other industries. Turn-over is greater
among women who drop out (often temporarily)
to raise families, or to take jobs for short periods
to supplement the family income. This type of
turn-over offers greater opportunities for women
to enter the industry since men tend to remain in
the industry until they retire.
Employment opportunities, however, are almost
equally good for men and should improve, since,
as we have already seen, a large proportion of the
clothing workers, both men and women, are well
along in years and almost three out of five male
workers are over 50 years of age. An increasing
number of these workers will vacate their jobs each
year through retirements or death which should
offer excellent opportunities for both men and
women. It is expected that the industry’s pension
plan will encourage retirements, since the age
requirement has been lowered to 65 years. Retire­
ments and deaths have already caused labor short­
ages in some clothing occupations, and may be
partially responsible for the gradual replacement
of men by women in many sections of the industry.
The employment outlook for prospective work­
ers in the men’s clothing industry is already favor­
able and may be expected to improve for both men
and women. Unless there is a general decline in
business activity, which is unlikely with increased
defense production, thousands of jobs should
become available during the next decade.
How

to Enter the In d u s try

Since the industry practices work sharing dur­
ing slack seasons, the hiring of additional workers
924049°— 51---------3



beyond the normal needs of the industry affects the
earnings of all workers. This tends to restrict
entry to periods when business is good, because
firms do not hire additional workers when the
earnings of their regular employees are affected.
The industry operates under a closed-shop
agreement, and union agreements usually specify
that employers must hire new workers through the
union employment offices. In areas where the
union does not have employment offices, hiring is
done informally by the manager and the union
business agent. When there are no qualified unem­
ployed union members in an area, or the union is
unable to provide workers, employers may hire
anyone.
For new workers, perhaps the best means of
entry is through friends and relatives working in
the industry who know when vacancies exist and
will recommend new workers for trial. Many
plants have employment offices where they hire
workers by informal arrangements with the union.
This is usually a good way to locate jobs and
obtain information on local requirements and
opportunities. Union business agents also recruit
employees when chronic shortages of workers de­
velop in certain occupations. Where maintained,
the union employment offices are good means of
entering the industry. In the New York area,
the State Employment Services’ Manhattan
Needle Trades Office is one of the principal place­
ment centers. State employment services in
other States also attempt to place new workers
in the industry. Since experienced unemployed
workers have first opportunity at vacancies listed
with the service, this method of entry is only prac­
ticable during periods of high employment. New
workers are required to join the union if they remain in the industry, but some locals permit new
employees to complete their probationary period
before requiring them to join.
Apprenticeships remain in only a few craft
jobs. They are still the best means of entry for
such highly skilled trades as cutting, patternmak­
ing, and tailoring. Some technical schools train
students for the needle trades and make an at­
tempt to place them. A list of these schools is
contained in Appendix I. Although some of
these schools give excellent training, graduates
still require considerable training on the job and
do not have too great an advantage over non­
graduates in obtaining entry jobs.

13

For many years, the men’s clothing industry
obtained most of its workers from newly arrived
immigrants who were already skilled. During
the late twenties and the depression of the thirties,
there were more experienced workers than jobs.
Consequently, the industry did not face a serious
training problem until W orld War II. As a re­
sult, it has not had much experience in training
workers and some firms are reluctant to train
people.
The training period varies from locality to lo­
cality and from firm to firm, depending upon the
willingness of the employer to devote time and
effort to training, the difficulty of the job, and
the aptitude o f the individual workers. When
a new worker satisfactorily completes a certain
established probationary period (usually 6 weeks
by union agreement), he acquires tenure in the
industry and can be fired only for cause. Many
employers use shorter periods during which they
decide whether to continue training a worker.
When a worker completes his probationary pe­
riod and is accepted as a permanent employee, he
is entitled to share equally in the work of his sec­

14




tion without regard to seniority. Since a per­
manent excess of workers attached to the industry
means lower earnings for everyone, there is a
tendency to limit entry in the industry. Some
overcrowded occupations have been almost closed
to newcomers for extended periods of time. These
occupations will offer greater opportunities in the
long run since they are now largely staffed with
older workers.
Some concerns have special training sections
where workers are partially trained before being
placed in production sections. Others rely on
informal coaching by supervisors and fellow em­
ployees. The length of training required before
the new employee can reach his maximum earning
speed depends upon the difficulty o f the task and,
of course, upon the employee’s aptitude. Appren­
ticeship schedules indicate that the average
worker needs approximately 7,000 hours o f train­
ing to become a skilled, all-round tailor. An un­
skilled machine operator can be trained in a couple
of weeks. In most jobs, new employees o f average
ability reach their maximum speed within rel­
atively short periods of time.

Opportunities in Individual Occupations

A d m in is tra tiv e P o sitio n s

In any industry, someone must make the basic
decisions and coordinate all activities. In small
clothing manufacturing concerns, the owner may
perform all of these functions himself, whereas
large concerns may be highly specialized with ex­
ecutives directing entire departments of adminis­
trative and clerical personnel. Administrative
positions vary from concern to concern depending
upon their size and type of operation. Personnel
in this category include material buyers, salesmen,
production executives, personnel officers, and in
large firms, advertising men, market analysts, pub­
lic-relations men, and several other types of spe­
cialized workers. •
Material Buyers
Buyers purchase fabrics and trimmings used
in making men's clothing. Positions range from
the head buyer in a large firm with several assist­
ants, to the owner of a small firm who does his own
buying.
A buyer must have a thorough knowledge of
fabrics and commodity markets. He must have a
good color-and-style sense and be able to recognize
the quality and value of fabrics. He must be ob­
servant of style trends and keep in close contact
with consumer demands. In addition, he must
develop friendly relations with suppliers and keep
abreast of the latest changes in the textile fields.
Buying requires a broad background in clothing
manufacturing. A buyer’s knowledge must come
chiefly from experience. Some buyers work their
way up from clerical and other occupations where
^hey acquired knowledge of materials and trade
“ know-how” whereas others acquire this knowl­
edge as assistants to buyers. The line of advance­
ment is to head buyer and then to a similar posi­
tion in a larger firm or to an executive position.
This is a small occupation since even the largest
firms have only a few buyers and only a limited
number of openings are anticipated.



Sales Positions
Most concerns maintain a sales staff responsible
for marketing their products. A large firm’s sales
department may include a sales director, advertis­
ing manager, salesmen, clerical workers, and mar­
ket analysts. The proprietors of small firms may
do their own selling.
Salesmen must have thorough knowledge of
their products, of the competition and markets for
them, as well as an understanding of advertising,
credit, and production. Above all, they must have
the ability to understand retailers’ problems and
to maintain good relations between their company
and its retailers, and ultimate consumers.
Prime qualifications are a pleasing personality
and a thorough knowledge of the market which
can come only from experience. Experience in
retail stores selling men’s clothing is a valuable
background since it gives salesmen an understand­
ing of the consumer. Other means of entry are
from university merchandising courses or advance­
ment from sales clerical jobs. Advancement is
from junior salesman to salesman and then to
sales director. Many large concerns have a train­
ing program for salesmen in which the trainee ac­
quires the necessary knowledge by assisting sales­
men or by working in the sales department. Small
concerns may rely on informal training or hire
experienced salesmen. Clothing salesmen have
interesting and varied jobs. However, they must
travel extensively and be away from home for
extended periods of time during certain seasons.
Although the number of salesmen is limited,
employment opportunities for new workers are
better than in most administrative positions. The
turn-over among salesmen is fairly high and some
vacancies occur each year.
Production Jobs
The majority of administrative positions are in
the production department where the manufac­
turing operations are directed. Positions range

15

from clerical jobs to the position of production
manager or director of manufacturing which, in
most concerns, is second only to the company
president in importance. Large firms have a num­
ber of production executives assisting the director
whereas the owner of the small firm is often his
own production manager with only clerical as­
sistance.
The production department is responsible for
planning production schedules, issuing work
specifications, organizing and maintaining the
plant, and supervising the preparation of raw ma­
terials and their fabrication into finished gar­
ments. Production executives need a wide ex­
perience in the clothing business and they are
usually persons who have long been in the industry.
As in most administrative work, there is a grow­
ing tendency to hire college graduates in begin­
ning positions as trainees for executive positions.
Section supervisors, inspectors, and quality men
are usually recruited from plant workers who
have extensive knowledge and judgment derived
from many years o f experience.
Production positions require extensive clothing
manufacturing experience, an educational back­
ground in business administration, or production
engineering training and experience. Advance­
ment is usually from clerical jobs or. junior posi­
tions through positions o f varying responsibility
up to production director. Section supervisors
may also advance along the same promotion path.
The production department has the greatest
number o f openings for administrative positions
but many of them are filled from within. The out­
look is for a number o f vacancies each year from
normal turn-over.
Other Administrative Positions
Some firms have credit managers, accountants,
executive secretaries, comptrollers, advertising
men, public relations men, industrial relations per­
sonnel, and personnel officers. These positions are
similar to their counterparts in other industries
and require the same general experience and quali­
fications. Opportunities are very limited. Since
only the largest firms employ such specialists, only
a limited number of qualified persons will be able
to find jobs in these fields each year.

16FRASER
Digitized for


Clerica l a n d O t h e r Office W o rk e rs

Approximately 1 clothing worker in 10 is in
the front office. Besides administrative person­
nel, there is a wide variety of clerks, bookkeepers,
stenographers, and other office workers. A large
firm will have purchasing clerks to keep records of
purchases and inventories and pay bills; sales
clerks who keep track of sales and goods shipped,
prepare bills for the company’s customers, and
investigate customers’ credit; production depart­
ment clerks who attend to details of specifications,
inventories, routing, and piecework records; per­
sonnel clerks who take care o f personnel records,
payrolls, and other personnel matters; and ship­
ping and receiving clerks who receive materials
and ship finished garments. The large firm will
also have cashiers, bookkeepers, stenographers,
and other specialized office workers.
Most o f these jobs require clerical experience or
training. Some require extensive clothing manu­
facturing experience. Business training in public
schools or business colleges will help prepare
entrants for most office jobs. Ability to operate
office business machines is a necessary qualifica­
tion for some positions.
Employers’ hiring practices vary considerably.
The best way to get an office job is through the
firm’s personnel office. State employment services
and private employment agencies also place
workers in the industry.
According to union agreements, office workers
undergo a 6-week trial period. A fter completing
their trial period, they become regular employees
and can be discharged only for cause. They are
then required to join the union. Office and clerical
personnel can advance to more responsible office
positions.
Working conditions are comparable to those for
office workers in other industries. Office person­
nel are on a 40-hour workweek. When business
conditions require a reduction in force, seniority
dictates that the newer workers be laid off first
and rehired last. Clerical and office workers re­
ceive the same paid vacations and holidays, insur­
ance, health, and other benefits as the plant
workers.
The long run outlook for clerical and office jobs
in the industry is only fair. Openings depend,

in large part, on turn-over; some qualified en­
trants will find jobs each year. The short run
outlook for these jobs is good, since the high level
of defense production will reduce the number of
qualified applicants.
D e s ig n e r s a n d P a tte rn m a k e rs

Designers
Designing is a profession which requires talent
and a high degree of skill. A designer originates
new style ideas and makes sketches or sample
garments of his ideas from which master patterns
can be made. He must be fully aware of style
trends and be able to ^interpret consumer style
demands correctly. Designers must be good
craftsmen, technically accurate, and able to make
sample garments to test their ideas. They should
be familiar with even the most minute tailoring
operations. Large concerns have several assistant
designers who design less important garments,
make up sample garments, and assist the designer.
Assistant designers require the same qualifications
to a less exacting degree. Some firms have style
reporters who frequent style centers, observing
and interpreting style variations which they re­
port to the designers.
Designing is a small but highly important oc­
cupation in the men’s clothing industry. De­
signers usually have years of apprenticeship in
designing or tailoring. Journeymen tailors or
patternmakers are often promoted to assistant
designers or, in small firms, to designers. From
there on, promotion is to head designer, and if
successful, to larger and larger firms. Some
schools prepare students for designing occupations
and assist them in entering the preparatory occu­
pations. Most designers in this industry are men.
Designing is a highly interesting occupation
and designers are usually left to their own initia­
tive so long as they produce results. Salaries de­
pend almost entirely upon the size of the firm
and the fame of the designer. Some designers
earn fabulous salaries whereas others have only
modest earnings.
The men’s clothing industry needs designers
with imagination and new ideas to replace the
famous designers of the past. But the designing
profession is a difficult one to enter and is one
that requires special abilities besides years of



preparation. Although jobs are limited in num­
ber, men with talent will always be in demand.
For others, the outlook is less encouraging.
Patternmakers
Patternmakers design, draw, and cut out fullsized master patterns for each garment. Pattern­
making is one of the most highly skilled of all
clothing manufacturing occupations. A pattern­
maker must be able to visualize the size, shape, and
number of pattern pieces from a sketch or model
furnished by the designer. Moreover, he must
have enough knowledge of materials and tailoring
to allow for pleats, shrinkage, and sewing. After
completing the pattern, he may make up a garment
from it and test it on a model to see that it has the
correct fit.
Patternmaking requires a detailed knowledge of
manufacturing processes and a thorough knowl­
edge of men’s body proportions. Patternmakers
must know the characteristics of fabrics and be
able to work from sketches and models.
Duties of patternmakers vary wuth the size of
concern or type of clothes produced. In small
shops, designers or journeymen tailors may make
patterns or the patternmaker may do the cutting,
marking, and pattern grading. Since pattern­
makers work closely with designers they have an
opportunity to learn designing if they have the
talent. Pattern graders or cutters are occasionally
promoted to patternmakers and these are good
entry occupations. The best way, however, for
beginners to become patternmakers is through ap­
prenticeships where they exist. Patternmaking is
predominantly a man’s job.
Working conditions are among the best o f all
clothing occupations. Since the work calls for a
high degree of skill and judgment, the pace is not
rapid and designing rooms are usually among the
best o f the plant’s facilities. Earnings are among
the highest of any clothing occupations.
The job outlook for patternmakers is good con­
sidering the small size of the occupation. As in
most clothing occupations requiring skill, present
workers are advanced in years and many will re­
tire or die during the next few years. Most of the
vacancies will be filled by promoting less skilled
workers with the necessary qualifications.

17

Pattern Graders

Pattern graders make patterns for different
sizes of garments from the master pattern. The
grader takes the standard pattern and modifies
each dimension according to a chart or table which
gives the various sizes which he marks on pattern
paper. The various size patterns are then cut and
marked. Pattern* graders require a detailed
knowledge of the garments their concerns manu­
facture as well as a thorough knowledge of stand­
ard garment measurements and proportions. In
i sense, a pattern grader is a specialized draftsman
Rrho makes the designer’s pattern conform to a
variety of human figures. With additional train­
ing, he has an opportunity to advance to pattern­
maker, since he has already acquired much of the
basic information and technical knowledge.
Where apprenticeships remain, they are a good
means of entering this occupation. As in most
dothing occupations, membership in the union
is necessary to get a job. Pattern grading is a
well-paid occupation which is limited to men.
Job opportunities will come as older workers
drop out of the industry. The outlook is gen­
erally favorable, although limited by the size of
the occupation.
Testing the tensile strength of cloth that w ill go into a suit.

C lo th P ro c e s sin g J o b s

Cloth processing jobs, performed by testers,
cloth examiners, spongers, and helpers, are closely
related and may be combined in some concerns.
Larger plants maintain laboratories where tex­
tile chemists and laboratory assistants do the test­
ing. Although small concerns often subcontract
the sponging operations, they usually do some
testing and examining of their own.
Testers or Laboratory Personnel

These workers make visual, physical, and chem­
ical tests of samples of cloth, thread, buttons, and
canvas for such qualities as strength, durability,
and fiber content. Depending on the size of the
establishment, the tester may do all the testing
himself and also examine the yard goods for de­
fects, or he may supervise the staff of a wellequipped laboratory. In very small firms, experi­
enced cloth examiners often do the testing almost
entirely by rule of thumb. Laboratories are
usually responsible for testing raw materials and
furnishing information on their quality to the
buyers. They also determine the sponging process
to be used in preparing the cloth for manufacture.
Laboratory personnel make many physical and
chemical tests to determine fiber content, length
of fiber, quality o f yam and weave, fastness o f
dyes, strength of cloth and the extent of its
shrinkage, and other qualities. Persons desiring
laboratory positions should acquire a broad back­
ground in chemistry and textile technology and
a familiarity with laboratory equipment and
techniques. Cloth manufacturing experience is a
valuable asset.
The outlook for laboratory positions or testing
jobs is fairly good, since it is anticipated that
modern scientific testing wTill gradually replace
the rule of thumb testing used by some of the
smaller concerns. To some extent, this service is
already provided by textile consultants. Although
textile testing is increasing, it is still a small oc­
cupation and can absorb only a limited number of
trained people. At present men predominate in
this occupation but women are being hired as
laboratory assistants by some firms.
Cloth Examiners

Cloth examiners measure cloth and examine it
for defects. The width and length of the cloth
18




tained on the job. Working conditions are about
average for the industry. Examiners usually
stand all day in hot and humid sponging rooms.
Earnings in this occupation are above the industry
average. The employment outlook is about the
same as in other men’s clothing occupations.
Spongers

Cloth is carefully exam ined for defects before it is m arked and cut.

are recorded and any defects in weaving or finish­
ing, such as holes, knots, poor weave, or irregular
design, are noted and marked to guide the cutting
department so that none of the defects will be in
garment cuttings. The purchasing department is
informed of the measure and quality of the cloth
so that if it does not meet specifications it may be
returned or credit claimed for shortages or defects.
These workers should have good eyesight and
be familiar with textile fabrics and their defects.
They must understand enough of cloth marking
and cutting to know the importance of the various
defects. Alert and conscientious examiners pre­
vent waste in cutting and therefore keep costs of
materials down. This is almost entirely a man’s
occupation.
Cloth examiners may be promoted to testing oc­
cupations or in some instances to buyers’ assist­
ants or piece goods buyers. Means of entry to
cloth examining jobs vary. Promotion from re­
ceiving clerk is one way—textile manufacturing
experience is another. As in most clothing manu­
facturing jobs, union membership is required.
Once a worker acquires the basic knowledge of
textile fabrics, the rest of the training can be ob­



Sponging is a process of shrinking and refinish­
ing cloth preparatory to cutting. In a large es­
tablishment, a sponger usually supervises several
helpers, whereas in a small establishment he may
do the entire operation. A qualified sponger has
an extensive knowledge of the reaction of various
textile fabrics and weaves to various shrinking
and finishing processes, and selects the best proc­
ess for each fabric. He is also skilled in operating
the various shrinking and processing machines.
Typical sponging processes pass the cloth through
cold water tanks or steam troughs, or through a
combination of steam and cold water. The cloth
is then dried, finished, and rolled or folded. Most
o f these activities are done with semiautomatic
machinery tended by relatively unskilled helpers
who make up the majority of cloth processing
workers. Head spongers, who must know the
amount of shrinkage to be expected from each type
of cloth and select the best process, are highly
skilled.
have an opportunity to be promoted
to spongers and this is the best way to acquire
the experience necessary for the more responsible
cloth processing jobs. All spongers and helpers
are men.
Working conditions are less attractive than in
other clothing occupations. Helpers' work is
heavy and the atmosphere hot and humid from
escaping steam and drying cloth. The machinery
is noisy and can be dangerous for careless workers.
Escaping steam sometimes causes severe burns.
Foremen and spongers are well paid, but un­
skilled helpers are poorly paid and there is a
fairly high turn-over among them. The outlook
for employment is about the same as for other
clothing occupations.

Helpers

C u ttin g R o o m

Jobs

Cutting occupations include the highly skilled
crafts of spreading, marking, and cutting and the
less skilled work of fitters, assemblers, and tick-

19

Cutting the garm ent parts from m arked plies of cloth is one of the most
skilled jobs in garm ent m anufacturing.

eters although the latter group are not always
located in the cutting room. These jobs generally
pay weekly wages rather than incentive rates.
One of the few definite promotion patterns in the
industry is found in the cutting department.
Ticketers can work their way up to cutters or
markers by working as assemblers and then as
fitters or spreaders. In many factories, these jobs
are not clear-cut and may be combined. Cutting
occupations are small and are mainly filled by
men.
Spreaders, Markers, and Cutters

In many firms, spreading, marking, and cutting
are done by the same man who is called a cutter.
When this work is divided into separate jobs,
marking is generally considered more skilled than
cutting. Spreading takes less skill than the other
two and is sometimes done by machine.
Spreading consists of spreading out on the cut­
ting tables bolts of yard goods or piece goods in
multiple layers preparatory to marking and
cutting. Care must be taken that the defects
marked in the cloth by the cloth examiner do not
fall into the parts cut for garments. Spreading
requires good eyesight, good color discrimination,
0
Digitized for 2FRASER


an ability to recognize defects in cloth and place
them properly, sufficient cutting-room experience
to know where ends of different bolts can be lapped
together, and an ability to match shades and pat­
terns. Sufficient strength is necessary to carry
heavy bolts of cloth and spread them out on long,
wide tables. Markers trace the outlines of the
various patterns onto the top layer of the pile o f
cloth with chalk. A marker must know when to
work directly on the cloth and when it is more
expedient to work on paper, and be able to arrange
his various patterns rapidly so as to waste the
minimum o f material. Figured cloth must be
marked so that figures on adjoining garment parts
will match perfectly when the garment is assem­
bled. Cutting consists of cutting out the various
parts of the garment from the marked plies or
layers of cloth already spread on the tables. Cut­
ters have to follow patterns closely and rapidly
with either automatic or hand cutting tools. Cut­
ters may be promoted to head cutters, foremen,
patternmakers, or designers.
Entry into cutting occupations is either by pro­
motion from a lower rated occupation or by ap­
prenticeship. In either case, obtaining member­
ship in the union is the first step. Since cutting
work is highly skilled, interesting, and pays well,
the number of people desiring to enter cutting
occupations has long been in excess of the needs of
the industry. Accordingly, membership in the
cutters’ locals has been restricted in the past, and
new members admitted only when needed. As a
result, the average age o f cutters is very high.
New workers will have to be trained to replace
them as they retire, although a fair number of
cutters were trained under veterans’ training
programs. The best method of entry at present
is through the apprenticeship programs being
initiated by some manufacturers.
Working conditions are pleasant. Since accu­
racy is valued more than speed, the pace of work
is less rigid than for most clothing occupations.
Cutting rooms are usually separated from the
noise and activity of the rest of the plant with
ample space and good lighting and ventila­
tion. The occupations themselves are more inter­
esting and less monotonous than most clothing
occupations.
Earnings are high compared to other clothing
manufacturing jobs. In the fall of 1948, average
straight-time hourly earnings of cutters and mark­

ers varied between $1.61 and $2.34 an hour, with
the average well above $24 Spreaders (a very
small occupation since most cutters do their own
spreading) earned slightly less than cutters. A l­
though cutters are usually paid weekly wages,
incentive payment is not unknown.
These are small occupations: spreaders, mark­
ers, and cutters combined account for only 1
worker out o f 20 in the industry. The outlook
for jobs in cutting occupations is only fair at
present because the industry still has a sufficient
number o f workers for its needs. Since the ma­
jority of cutters are men over 55, an increasing
number will retire from the industry during the
next few years and the chances of getting cutting
jobs should improve.
Fitters
These workers prepare cut-out garment parts
for sewing by marking locations for pockets, but­
tons, buttonholes, and belt loops. In addition, they
sort, match, and trim small garment parts and
linings which have been previously cut to appro­
priate size by other workers. Fitters should have
a complete knowledge of garment construction and
be able to cut garment pieces by hand or machine.
These jobs are frequently filled by promoting shap­
ers or assemblers. In turn, fitters are occasionally
promoted to cutters.
Earnings in this occupation range widely from
city to city and even from factory to factory be­
cause of variations in the duties assigned and the
skill required to perform them. For example, in
the latter part of 1948, the average straight-time
hourly earnings for fitters in New York City was
$2.44, but in Baltimore it was $1,534 Fitters
are paid piecework rates or weekly wages depend­
ing upon the practice of their area.
Employment opportunities are about the same
as for men’s clothing workers generally.
Assemblers and Ticketers
After the garment pieces have been cut out, they
are gathered together by assemblers into bundles,
the necessary accessories are put with them, and
the bundles are routed to the various sewing sec­
tions. Assemblers match parts according to color
and pattern, and must be careful not to mix sizes
or styles. I f the assembling operation is faulty,
1 Since this wage survey was made, in September 1948, workers
on piece rates have received a 12.5-cent hourly wage increase and
weekly workers a wage increase of $5 a week.




the production routine may be upset in the sewing
department. Assemblers should be able to follow
many and varied instructions and be good judges^
of color and patterns. They are sometimes pro­
moted to jobs as spreaders or fitters; ticketers may
be promoted to assemblers.
Ticketers attach identifying tickets to the gar­
ment parts before they are routed to the sewing
sections. Tickets may also serve as a means of
keeping track of piecework for those workers
who are paid piece rates. When this system is
used, each employee detaches a ticket after he
completes work on a garment or a part. These
detached tickets serve as a record for determining
his pay. The duties of the ticketer are frequently
combined with other jobs, such as assembling.
Ticketers and assemblers should be adaptable to
tedious work since their mistakes can cause con­
fusion, loss o f time, and loss of earnings to other
workers. Ticketing is an unskilled occupation
requiring no previous experience. However, in
firms where one worker does all the ticketing, he
must be well acquainted with the production
routine.
Since assembling and ticketing are relatively
unskilled entry jobs, they usually pay less than
other clothing jobs. As a result, turn-over is
fairly high and jobs become open frequently.
Tailors

Tailors are hand sewers able to do all-round
tasks requiring considerable skill. Perhaps more
than any other craftsmen, tailors must know the
detailed processes of clothing manufacturing. As
a result, tailoring knowledge is often a prerequi­
site for more important jobs in the industry.
Tailors often have supervisory responsibilities.
They have a close relationship with the machine
sewers, whose work they may supervise or partic­
ipate in, and they work closely with designers
and patternmakers also. In small tailoring shops,
tailors are very important workmen and must be
able to do a variety of tasks. Tailoring is pre­
dominantly a man’s occupation. However, if the
present shortage of skilled tailors continues, an
increasing number of women may enter the trade.
Since the responsibilities of tailors vary widely
from shop to shop and from one grade of clothing
to another, there are many types of tailors.
Among the most common are: head tailors who are
21

responsible for maintaining production stand­
ards; journeymen tailors who are able to make a
garment from start to finish by hand or machine;
bushelmen or alteration tailors who repair and
alter defective garments; and shop tailors who
perform only a few skilled tailoring tasks. All
of these are skilled workers but the specialized
shop tailor cannot be considered as skilled as the
all-round tailor who can perform any tailoring
job.
Head tailors are often known as “ quality men,”
since they are responsible for the quality of the
firm’s output in addition to their supervisory
duties. In large firms, this job may be almost en­
tirely administrative. In any event, the head
tailor must have a thorough knowledge of all
production processes and his firm’s standards
in addition to being an experienced and fully
qualified tailor. Needless to say, the only way to
get this job is to work up from less responsible
tailoring jobs. Promotion is to more important
administrative jobs in the production department.
Journeymen tailors make complete garments or
perform the more difficult hand and machine work
in their construction. This is one of the more
skilled jobs in the industry and it requires an
ability to design clothes, make patterns, cut out
the material, baste it together, and sew the entire
garment by hand or machine. Detailed knowl­
edge of garment-manufacturing processes and
sewing machines, and ability to supervise other
workers performing minor tasks also are required.
Journeymen tailors also make sample garments by
hand for designers. Many journeymen tailors are
employed in the tailor-to-trade establishments.
Journeymen tailors have the opportunity to be­
come designers, patternmakers, and foremen and
may have the duties of these workers added to
their job. Journeymen tailors usually enter by
apprenticeship after experience in other phases of
garment construction. Even after basic qualify­
ing experience, considerable training and experi­
ence are required. As in all tailoring occupations,
patience is a prime qualification.
Bushelmen or alteration tailors are generally
less skilled than journeymen tailors. Their job is
to repair and alter garments rejected in the manu­
facturing process. They must be familiar with
the operations of the various sewing machines; in
addition, they must have had experience in the
construction o f garments they work on. They

22




must also know how to press various garments.
Bushelmen have an opportunity to advance to
foremen or journeymen tailors. The best way to
become a bushelman is through apprenticeship or
advancement from shop tailor or hand-sewing
jobs.
Shop tailors are specialized hand or machine
sewers who perform tasks requiring tailoring skill.
The duties of this job vary from plant to plant,
depending on the size of shop and type of produc­
tion system used. Shop tailors may perform such
tasks as stitching in shoulder padding, sewing in
linings, or setting in sleeves by machine. The job
requires a detailed and practical knowledge of
specialized tailoring tasks and a familiarity with
the various sewing machines.
Promotion for shop tailors is limited owing to
the specialized nature of the job. Some have op­
portunities to become section foremen or altera­
tion tailors. Entry into this job is from tailor
apprenticeships or basting and finishing jobs.
Tailoring is a well-paid trade. Head tailors are
paid weekly wages or salaries which depend upon
the responsibility of the job. Journeymen tail­
ors are also paid weekly wages, and although their
earnings are less than those of head tailors, they
are usually greater than those o f alteration tailors
or shop tailors. This is not always true, however,
since the type o f plant organization varies and
in some plants specialized hand sewers on piece­
work rates earn more than either journeymen tail­
ors or bushelmen. In the fall of 1948, average
straight-time hourly earnings o f alteration tailors
varied between $1.12 and $1.81 an hour, depending
on the location and type o f shop, with the average
well above $1.50 an hour.1 A t the same time, the
average straight-time hourly earnings of machine
sleeve sewers varied between $1.62 and $2.42 an
hour, depending upon the location and type of
shop, with the average well over $2 an hour. Other
shop tailoring jobs generally pay less than this
highly skilled job.
Present employment opportunities for tailors
are good, since there is already a shortage of almost
all types o f skilled hand sewers. Young people
have not entered tailoring occupations in any num­
ber and appear to have avoided hand-sewing occu­
pations generally. As a result, tailors currently
1 Since this wage survey was made, in September 1948, workers
on piece rates have received a 12.5-cent hourly wage increase and
weekly workers a wage increase o f $5 a week.

employed are older than those in most clothing
occupations and many are retiring from the indus­
try. Opportunities for tailoring jobs will be
greater than in any other men’s clothing occupa­
tions and are expected to continue to increase.
S e w in g Job s

Three out of five men’s clothing workers are in
some type of sewing job, either hand or machine.
Workers are usually separated into sections mak­
ing a single garment. For example, the actual
operations of assembling and sewing suits are gen­
erally done by three, more or less separate, groups
o f workers engaged in coat, trouser, and vest fab­
rication. Within these sections, work is further
sectionalized into individual operations.
A l­
though many of these operations are quite dis­
tinct, they require similar qualifications and have
similar working conditions.
Most sewing jobs require individuals capable of
doing painstaking, routine work with the fingers
and hands, and doing it rapidly. Since almost all
o f these jobs are piecework, any handicap involv­
ing the fingers, hands, or arms, or such handicaps
as slow or clumsy fingers will reduce the workers'
earnings and their chances of keeping their jobs.
These jobs do not require much physical strength,
but good eyesight is essential and an ability to
read and write is often necessary. Since manu­
facturing methods differ from plant to plant, the
degree o f skill required in any occupation may
vary widely, depending on the complexity and
number of operations assigned to the job.
Entry into beginning sewing jobs is relatively
easy since little education is required. Moreover,
there are few restricting physical requirements.
Most jobs can be filled by either men or women.
Usually no previous training is required, although
concerns prefer to hire workers with previous ex­
perience. A number o f private and public trade
schools located in clothing manufacturing centers
offer training for the needle trades.
Training within the industry is generally in­
formal and received under the supervision of the
section foreman. Although some firms have
special training sections where new workers receive
preliminary training before being placed in the
section, the majority of trainees learn by actually
working on the job. Experienced workers often
assist in training new workers. Some sewing jobs



require a high degree of skill and training which
can be acquired only by experience in less skilled
needle trades. The majority of jobs are quickly
learned although it may take a long while for the
new worker to reach top speed and earnings.
The average sewer has little chance of promotion
beyond that of foreman of a section. Promotion
is largely from beginning sewing jobs to more
skilled and highly paid jobs in the same field.
Workers with exceptional ability, however, may
rise to management jobs, and many of the people
in management did start in modest jobs.
Most sewing jobs are performed sitting down.
Although the work is done at top speed, it is not
strenuous physically. It is extremely monotonous.
Working conditions depend largely upon the indi­
vidual plants. Serious accidents are rare in these
occupations, but occasionally a sewer will punc­
ture a finger.
Machine Sewing Jobs

Machine sewers comprise more than a third o f
the industry’s workers. There is a great deal of
specialization and variation in skills in this large
occupation. Workers use standard, all-purpose

23

machines or special machines designed to perform
a single operation at high speed, or both. A ll­
round operators who are able to operate any of the
standard or special sewing machines replace absent
workers or assist sections which are temporarily
behind in production. These workers have had
extensive experience and are able to perform any
operation on any garment. The majority of work­
ers specialize on a single operation. Some make
complete parts such as collars, cuffs, pockets, or
sleeves. Others attach collars or sleeves, join
shoulders, or join fronts and backs of garments.
Some of these jobs require considerable experience
and skill.
Machine basters put in the long, loose stitches
which hold garments together until permanently
stitched. Since these operations involve shaping
the garment, they require a fair degree of skill.
Other machine operators perform dozens of
specialized operations such as sewing buttonholes,
sewing on pockets, felling the body lining, padding
collars and lapels, serging, and piping seams.
Most machine operators are paid on piece rates,
set by collective bargaining between the union and
employers, which conform roughly to the degree
o f skill required for each job. Since the majority
of machine sew7ers are only semiskilled, machine
sewers as a group are not highly paid. Individual
earnings, o f course, depend upon the speed of the
individual. Earnings of sewing machine oper­
ators working on coat fabrics are higher than
those making trousers because coat-making re­
quires greater skill. Average straight-time hourly
earnings, during the fall of 1948, for a few of
the larger machine sewing occupations were as
follow s:
T able 1.— Machine sewing occupations— average straighttime hourly earnings 1

Occupation

New Phila­ Roch­
Balti­ Chicago York
more
City delphia ester

Joining shoulders, men
.....
$1.49
Joining side seams, men. . __
1.56
Sewing edge tape, men. . . . .
1.51
Sewing in sleeves, men.
1.65
Joining shoulders, women_____
1.27
Joining side seams, women____
1.39
Basting edges, women _
1.32
Jump stitch operator, women__
1.34
Padding collars and lapels,
wom en..___ ____________ * 1.27
Making trouser pockets, women.
1.26
Serging, women______ ____
1.25

$1.82
1.72
1.59
1.74
1.35
1.65
1.41
1.43

$1.98
1.91
2.10
2.37
1.58
1.97
1.79
1.48

$1.74
1.88
1.85
2.20
1.36
1.40
1.47
1.49

$1.58
1.60
1.65
1.85
1.61
1.44
1.40
1.44

1.39
1.38
1.37

1.80
1.73
1.37

1.43
1. 51
1.24

1.43
1. 31
1.26

1 Since this wage survey was made, in September 1948, workers on piece
rates have received a 12.5-cent hourly wage increase and weekly workers a
wage increase of $5 a week.

24for FRASER
Digitized


The outlook for employment in machine sewing
jobs is good. Since women predominate in these
occupations, turn-over is greater than in occupa­
tions with a greater proportion of men although
retirements and deaths are fewer. It is antici­
pated that a fairly large number o f jobs will be­
come available each year and that the employment
outlook will gradually improve during the next
few years but not as rapidly as in other occupa­
tions. Since machine sewing covers a large group
of jobs, there will be variations in employment
opportunities among individual jobs and among
garment centers. In the New York area, machine
sewing jobs, including those requiring the more
skilled workers, are still largely filled by older
men who are expected to retire in increasing num­
bers.
Employment opportunities should be
greater in that area than in other sections of the
country.
Hand Sewing Jobs

Some hand sewing and finishing operations are
used on all grades of suits and coats. The amount
of hand work increases with the quality and work­
manship put into the garment. In manufacturing
Basting canvas and p a d d in g to a coat front. This hand se w in g operation
helps give a more perfect fit and drape to the finished suit.

high quality clothing, the parts are usually basted
together by hand before they are permanently
stitched, since this provides a more perfect fit and
drape to the garment. Hand sewing occupations
include basting, finishing, making buttonholes,
and sewing on buttons. Most hand sewers spe­
cialize in a single operation. Women generally
predominate in most of these jobs except in bast­
ing which is usually a man’s occupation. Hand
basters baste body linings, facings, canvas and
padding to coat fronts, and baste collars together.
Machines are used for some of these operations
in manufacturing cheaper clothing. Finishers
perform sewing tasks like bar-tacking buttonholes
and pockets or sewing loops and hangers. These
tasks, which are necessary to complete the gar­
ment, cannot be done conveniently on machines.
This is the largest of hand sewing occupations and
is composed mostly of women. Buttons are nearly
always sewed by women but buttonholes are made
by both men and women. Buttonhole makers out­
number button sewers in most plants and are more
skilled. There are a number of other hand sewing
jobs in the fabrication of trousers and other gar­
ments.
About two out of five workers in the men’s cloth­
ing industry are in hand sewing occupations. As
in other large occupations, there is a wide range
in skill and earnings between individual jobs.
Hand sewers are paid incentive rates. Earnings
in some skilled hand sewing jobs are well above
the average o f the industry but, as a group, hand
sewers have low earnings. Average straight-time
hourly earnings, in the fall of 1948, for a few of
the larger hand sewing occupations are shown in
the following table:

result in turn-over that is fairly high for this
industry. Moreover, the more highly skilled jobs
are held, in large part, by older workers who are
leaving the industry in increasing numbers. There
is already a shortage of skilled hand fellers, and
shortages in other skilled occupations are expected
to develop. Job opportunities should increase for
several years.
P re ss in g J o b s

Pressing is one of the most important processes
in the manufacture of men’s clothing, since it is
required to shape a garment during manufac­
ture and helps determine its final appearance.
This large occupation has nearly one out of every
six clothing workers. There are two types of
pressers: finish pressers who shape and press com­
pleted garments prior to shipment, and underpressers who smooth and shape garment parts
during the manufacturing process.
Pressing is often strenuous work, especially final
pressing. As a result, women are rarely em­
ployed as final pressers, although some work as
under-pressers. Pressing rooms are often hot and
Final pressing of a coat collar. Finish pressers are am ong the highest p a id
of m en’s clothing w orkers.

T able 2.— Hand sewing occupations— average straighttime hourly earnings

Balti­
more

Chi­
cago

New
York
City

Basters, body lining and facing,
$1.40
men.
Basters, body lining and facing,
1.39
women.
Basters, collar, men . .
1.57
Basters, collar, women. ... .
1.45
Button sewers, women .. .. _ 1.16
Buttonhole makers, women. ...
1.29
Finishers, women_______ ...
1.11

$1.46

$1.80

$1. 76

$1.57

1.34

1.51

1.41

1.45

1.45
1.32
1.21
1.28
1.21

1.84
1. 50
1.40
1.59
1.26

1. 74
1.50
1.24
1.25
1.14

1.64
1.35
1.23
1.33
1.15

Occupation

Phila­ Roches­
del­
ter
phia

Employment opportunities in hand sewing oc­
cupations are good. The large proportion of
women and the low earnings in many of these jobs



25

humid. Final pressing is a particularly hot and
sometimes noisy operation. A number of occupa­
tional hazards are present. Burns from steam or
from contact with hot equipment are common.
Flat feet may result from continuous standing and
the application of pressure to foot pedals. In
some cases, health may be impaired from inhaling
chemicals and dyes in the vapor coming from
fabrics during pressing operations.
Under-pressers are less skilled than final pressers. They usually specialize on a particular
part; for example, armholes, seams, darts, fronts,
lining, pants-tops, and pockets. Final pressers
may also specialize on a part of the garment.
Under-pressers may be promoted to finish pressers.
They are usually trained on the job for simpler
pressing tasks and, as they gain experience, moved
up to the more skilled and complicated tasks.
Finish pressing requires some previous experience
either as an under-presser or from the outside.
Pressing is one of the few clothing occupations in
which wmrkers can find similar jobs outside the
industry and there is some transferring back and
forth between the industry and outside jobs.
M a rk in g a coat lapel before trim m ing is one of the operations performed
by shapers.


26


Finish pressers are among the highest paid of
men’s clothing workers. Under-pressers earn
less but still have higher hourly earnings than the
average clothing worker. The following table
shows average straight-time hourly earnings in
the fall of 1948, for both types of pressing job s:
T able

3.— Pressing

occupations— average
hourly earnings 1

Occupation
Finish pressers, hand, coats__
Finish pressers, machine, coats. Finish pressers, trousers--------Under-pressers, coats---- -------Under-pressers, trousers______

straight-time

New Phila­ Roch­
Balti­ Chicago York
more
City delphia ester
$1.92
1.87
2. 02
1.49
1.49

$1.79
1.82
2.06
1.55
1.64

$2. 01
1.95
1.99
1.81
1. 71

$1. 95
1.94
2.13
1.66
1.58

$1.73
1.88
1.72
1.71
1.61

1Since this wage survey was made, in September 1948, workers on piece
rates have received a 12.5-cent hourly wage increase and weekly workers
a wage increase of $5 a week.

Since pressing is a large occupation, a number
of jobs become available each year because of turn­
over. The outlook for employment is fairly good
and may be expected to improve.
M is c e lla n e o u s C lo t h in g J o b s

A number of fairly large occupations in the
men’s clothing industry do not fall into any major
section; for example, work distributors, thread
trimmers or cleaners, pairers or turners, shapers,
and inspectors.
perform certain specialized operations
on coats. Their duties vary from shop to shop but,
in general, they trim and cut various parts of
partially completed garments with shears, shape
the garments accurately and make them conform
to style, or prepare garments for subsequent steps
in fabrication. Shaping jobs require skill and ex­
perience in garment construction. They are gen­
erally filled by men. Assemblers and basters are
sometimes promoted to these jobs. Shapers, in
turn, may be promoted to fitters or to foremen.
are unskilled workers who are
often called floor girls or floor boys. They dis­
tribute bundles o f garment parts to the various
sections and collect the garments or garment parts
finished by each section and pass them on to the
next section in the production schedule.
remove loose
threads and basting, brush thread and lint from
the garments, and otherwise prepare them for

Shapers

Workdistributors

Thread trimmers or cleaners

final pressing. This is the largest miscellaneous
group of workers and is largely composed of
women.
match cut-out or sewed gar­
ment parts, such as sleeves, fronts, backs, collars,
and lining, according to size, ticket number, color,
and kind of fabric. They also prepare parts for
other w orkers by turning sleeves or, in some cases,
by trimming edges with scissors.
There are two types of
final inspec­
tors and inspectors who inspect partially com­
pleted garments during various stages of manu­
facture. They determine whether the garments
conform to shop standards and mark such defects
as dropped stitches or bad seams and, in some
cases, perform minor repairs. Both men and
women are employed as inspectors, with men pre­
dominating in final inspection.
Other small occupations include
who
verify the work done by each sewer and record i t ;
who remove spots and stains; and
who 'repair defects.
Shaping and inspecting require skill and ex­
perience in clothing manufacturing. Shapers’
earnings depend on the skill required for the
particular task performed. But earnings in even
the less skilled shaping jobs are above the industry
average. Inspectors are not so well paid. Final
inspectors who have greater experience and skill
are usually paid more than other inspectors. As
a group, inspectors’ earnings are close to the in­
dustry average. The unskilled thread trimmers
and work distributors earn less than the majority
of clothing workers. Average hourly earnings in
these occupations during the fall of 1948 were as
follow s:

Pairersandturners

inspectors:

checkers
menders

spotters

T able 4.— Miscellaneous clothing jobs— average straighttime hourly earnings 1

Occupation
Coat shapers, edge and bottom,
mem
Coat shapers, under-collar, men.
Coat shapers, under-collar, wo­
men.. ... ___ _____ ____
Work distributors, women__ _.
Coat thread trimmers, women...
Coat pairers and turners, women.
Final inspectors, men_______
Final inspectors, women. ____

New Phila­ Roch­
Balti­ Chicago York
more
City delphia ester
$1.64
1.66

$1.59
1.65

$2. 07
1.96

$1.81
1.93

$1.69
1.87

1.50
.91
1.04
.97
1.45
1.06

(2)
.86
1.10
1.10
1.45
.95

1.65
1.07
1.00
1.20
1.64
1.31

1.15
(2)
1.01
1.10
1.30
1.15

1.54
.97
1.24
1.21
1.54
(2)

1 Since this wage survey was made, in September 1948, workers on piece
rates have received a 12.5 cent hourly wage increase and weekly workers a
wage increase of $5 a week.
2Insufficient number of workers to justify presentation of an average.




The chances of finding miscellaneous clothing
jobs are about average for the industry. The
lower-paid unskilled jobs have a higher turn-over
and openings are usually plentiful in good times.
Since these are beginning jobs, many of them
become vacant as workers gain experience and
move up to better jobs. Shapers’ and inspectors’
jobs should also be plentiful.
M a in t e n a n c e ,

S h ip p in g

and

Sto ra ge, a n d

C u s t o d ia l J o b s

Maintenance Jobs
Maintenance workers fall chiefly into two cate­
gories: sewing machine repairmen and general
utility maintenance men. Sewing machine repair­
men repair sewing machines and other mechanical
equipment and keep them in good working order.
Their duties usually include the maintenance of
cutting and pressing machines as well as of sewing
machines. Repairmen also convert machines from
one use to another as needed. Repairmen helpers
assist repairmen oil and clean machinery, and
make minor repairs. General utility maintenance
men maintain and repair factory buildings, bins,
furniture, and other plant facilities.
These jobs require mechanical aptitude, and
some specialized training and experience which is
acquired from training courses or from on-the-job
training as helpers. Some maintenance men learn
their trade in equipment repair shops.
Sewing machine repairmen are among the
higher paid workers in the industry. The follow­
ing table contains average straight-time hourly
earnings during the fall of 1948 in five selected
cities:
T able

5.— Maintenance occupations— average
time hourly earnings 1

Occupation
Sewing machine repairmen____
General utility maintenance men_

straight-

New Phila­ Roch­
Balti­ Chicago York
more
City delphia ester
$1. 61
(2)

$1.77
1.69

$2. 09
1.65

$2.12
1.64

$1.68
(2)

1Since this wage survey was made, in September 1948, workers on piece
rates have received a 12.5-cent hourly wage increase and weekly workers a
wage increase of $5 a week.
2 Insufficient number of workers to justify presentation of an average.

A ll maintenance jobs are filled by men. The
number required is small and there is little op­
portunity for advancement. Employment oppor­
tunities are limited by the size of the occupation.

27

Shipping and Storage Jobs
Receiving clerks, stock clerks for completed
garments, piece goods men, and packers, do most
of the shipping and storage work. These em­
ployees comprise approximately 2 percent of all
men’s clothing workers. Receiving clerks receive,
check, and record incoming materials, and in some
cases, tag materials. Completed garments are
stored by the stock clerks who send the garments
to the shipping department as they are called for.
Stock clerks may also store cut-out garment parts.
Piece goods men store and issue piece goods and
accessories like buttons, canvas, thread, pins, and
needles. Packers do the actual packing when
orders are filled.
Most o f these occupations require some clerical
aptitude. Promotional opportunities are gener­
ally limited. Some heavy lifting is required and
the majority o f jobs are filled by men. As the
following table indicates, average straight-time
hourly earnings in the fall of 1948, were below the
average for the industry.

28




T able 6.— Shipping

and storage occupations— average
straight-time hourly earnings 1

Occupation
Garment stock clerks_
Piece goods stock clerks.
Packers___________

Balti­
more
$1.14
1.15
.92

York Philadel­ Roches­
Chicago New
City
ter
phia
$1.08
1.12
1.18

$1.25
1.37
1.43

$1.40
1.27
1.29

$1.40
1.41
1.30

1 Since this wage survey was made, in September 1948, workers on piece
rates have received a 12.5 cents hourly wage increase and weekly workers a
wage increase of $5 a week.

Employment opportunities are limited by the
size of the occupations. A fair number of jobs are
expected to be available to new workers each year.
Custodial Jobs
Custodial workers include watchmen, guards,
janitors, and sweepers. The jobs of these workers
are similar to their counterparts in other indus­
tries. They are very low paid and seldom offer any
opportunity for advancement. Since janitors and
sweepers form a large group in suit and coat fac­
tories, their jobs are usually easy to get and no
previous experience or training is required.

Appendix I

Schools Offering Job Training

Power Sewing-Machine Operation

Power Sewing-Machine Operation— Continued

California

New Jersey

Fremont Senior High School, Los Angeles
Wiggins Trade Senior High School, Los
Angeles
Central Trade School, Oakland

D istrict of Columbia
M. M. Washington Vocational High School
(Negro), Washington

Florida
Miami Technical High School, Miami

Maryland
School No. 292, Baltimore
School No. 296, Baltimore

Massachusetts
Boston Trade High School for Girls, Boston
Springfield Trade School (Girls), Springfield
Arthur A. Hansen School (Girls), Waltham
David Hale Fanning Trade School for Girls,
Worcester

Michigan
Girls Junior Trade School, Detroit

Thomas A. Edison Vocational & Technical
School (Girls), Elizabeth
Vocational Technical High School for Girls,
Newark
Middlesex County Girls Vocational School,
Woodbridge

&

New York
Amsterdam Technical High School, Amster­
dam
Dunkirk High School, Dunkirk
Kingston Vocational High School, Kingston
Brooklyn High School of Womens Garment
Trades, New York
Central High School of Needle Trades, New
York
Jane Addams Vocational High School, New
York
McKee Vocations High School, New York
Manhattan High School of Womens Garment
Trades, New York
Metropolitan Vocational High School, New
York
New York Needle Trade School, New York
Queens Vocational High School, New York
Benjamin Franklin High School, Rochester
High School of Commerce, Yonkers

Minnesota
Girls Vocations School, St. Paul

Missouri
Hadley Technical High School, Kansas City
Washington Technical High School (Negro),
St. Louis

Ohio
Hower Vocational High School, Akron
East High School, Cincinnati
Jane Addams Vocational School, Cleveland
Whitney Vocational High School, Toledo

Pennsylvania
Nebraska
Technical High School, Omaha



Helen Fleischer Vocational School, Philadel­
phia
29

Power Sewing-Machine Operation— Continued

Men’s Tailoring— Continued

Puerto Rico

Kentucky

Industrial Arts School, Rio Piedras
J. Gomez Vocational School, San Juan

Virginia
Richmond Vocational School, Richmond

'Washington
King County School District No. 1, Seattle

Wisconsin
School of Vocational and Adult Education,
Milwaukee

West Kentucky Vocational Training School
(Negro), Paducah

M aryland
School
School
School
School

No. 292, Baltimore
No. 296, Baltimore
No. 451, Baltimore
No. 454 (Negro), Baltimore

Missouri
St. Joseph High School, St. Joseph

Pennsylvania
Men’s Tailoring

Alabama
State Agricultural & Mechanical Institute
(Negro), Normal

Edward Bok Vocational School, Philadelphia

South Carolina
Burke Industrial School (Negro), Charleston

Texas
Arkansas
Dunbar High School (Negro), Little Rock

Prairie View College (Negro), Prairie View
St. Phillips Junior College (Negro), San
Antonio

California
Wiggins Trade Senior High School, Los
Angeles

D istrict of Columbia
M. M. Washington Vocational High School
(Negro), Washington

Virginia
St. Paul’s Polytechnic Institute (Negro),
Lawrenceville
Virginia State College (Negro), Petersburg

Washington
King County School District No. 1, Seattle

Florida
Florida Agricultural & Mechanical College
for Negroes, Tallahassee

Illinois
Dunbar Vocational High School (Negro),
Chicago
Taylor’s Trade School, Chicago
Washburne Trade School, Chicago

30




Garment Designing and Grading

Illinois
Charles J.
Chicago

Stone

Foundation

Institute,

Source: The Merits S u it Industry by L. Neville
Rieman

Appendix II

Straight-time average hourly earnings,1 selected occupations in men’s and boys’ suit and coat manufacturing establish­
ments in 9 cities, August-Sept ember 19^8

New York

Baltimore
Occupation

Con­
All Regu­
tract
lar
shops shops
2 shops

Bos­
ton

Chi­
cago

Cin­
cin­
nati

Los
An­
geles

Philadelphia

Roch­ St.
Con­ All Regu­ Con­ ester Louis
All Regu­
lar
lar
tract
tract
shops shops 2 shops shops shops 2 shops

Plant occupations—M en

Cutting:
Cutters and markers__ ______ _ . _
Cutters, bodv-lining_______ _______
Coat fabrication:
Basters, body-lining and facing, hand__
Basters, canvas, hand___________
Basters, collar, hand____ ________ _
Fitters_________________________
Pressers, finish, hand. __________
Pressers, finish, machine___________
Sewing-machine operators 4________
Joining shoulders, cloth_________
Joining side seams, _ _________
Joining under-collar, joining sleeve
lining, or piecing pockets______
Jump-stitch operations___ ______
Sewing edge tape ________ .
Sewing in sleeve. ____________
Stitching edges _____ ___ ___
Shapers, edge and bottom__________
Shapers, under-collar. ___________
Tailors, all-round. . ____________
Under-pressers_____ ___________
Trousers fabrication:
Pressers, finish___________________
Sewing machine operators 4____ _____
Attaching waistband. _________
Joining inseams_______________
Joining outseams _ ___________
Joining seat seam s.______ ___ _
Making pockets. ____________
Serging.. ----------------------------Under-pressers___________________
Other selected jobs:
Inspectors, final (examiners)________
Janitors________________________
Maintenance men, general utility
Packers_____ . . . _ ________ ...
Repairmen, sewing machine_______
Stock clerks, garment___________ ...
Stock clerks, piece goods __________
Work distributors. _____________

$2.06
1.98

$2.06
1.98

$2. 25 $2.02 $1.80 $2.15 $2.34 $2.34
2. 02 1.81 1.61 2.01 2. 28 2. 28

1.41
00
1.51
1.65
1.42
1.64
1.66
1.68
1.49

00
(3)
1.43 $1.36
00
00
1.66 1.51
1.66 1.47
1.96 1.86
2. 01 1.74
1. 56 1.56
1.50 1.49
1.48
00
1.52 1.37
00
00
1.41 1.57
1.69 1.62
1.30
00
1.64 1.64
1.55 1.88
1.59 1.81
1.54 1.44

2.02
1.54
2. 06
1.61
1.44
1. 58
1.42
1.39
1.49

1.92
1.53
(3)
(3)
00
1.76
1.39
(3)
1.43

2.16
1.54
(3)
1.64
1.29
1.36
1.45
1.17
1.55

00
(3)
00
(3)
00
00
(3)
(3)
(3)

1.45
.76
(3)
.92
1.61
1.14
1.15
1.03

1.29
.76
(3)
.92
1. 61
1. 14
1.15
1.02

1.68
.76
(3)
(3)
00
(3)
(3)
(3)

1.39
1.38
1. 45
1.16
1.29
1.11
.97
1.29
1.32
1.19
1.31
1.27
1.39

1. 38
(3)
1.46
1.13
1. 24
1.13
.95
1.31
1.45
(3)
1.34
(3)
1.38

1.23
1.34
1. 27
1.18
1.25
1.37
1.65
1. 25
1.28
1.04

1.34
1.38
1.37
1.16
1.36
1.43
1.72
1.33
1.54
1.05

1.40
(3)
1.57
1.53
1.92
1.87
1.56
1.49
1.56

1.69
(3)
(3)
1.62
1.88
1.83
1.78
1.63
1.80

1.46
1.76
1.45
1.86
1.79
1.82
1.67
1.82
1.72

00
00
1.80
1.99
1.66
1.73
1.93
(3)
1.64

00
1.42
1.59
1.74
1.64
1.59
1.65
1.58
1.55

00
00
(3)

(3)
2.01
2.07
1.80
(3)

00
00
00
(3)

2. 03
(3)

1.90
1.56
1.94
(3)

2. 35
2. 09
1.91
1.99
1.76
00
(3)

2. 01
2.00
OO

(3)

(3)

$2.11
2.01

(3)

(3)

$2.01
1.87

$1.69
1.86

1.80
1.72
1.84
2.44
2. 01
1.95
2. 02
1.98
1.91

1.82 $1.77
1.69 1.77
1.86 1.82
2. 45 2.44
2. 09 1.90
2.11 1.84
2. 05 1.99
2.02 1.95
1.95 1.87

1.76
1.58
1.74
2.34
1.95
1.94
1.79
1.74
1.88

1.76
1.58
1.74
2.27
1.93
1.97
1.77
1.78
1.85

1.77
1.74
2.44
1.98
1.90
1.80
1.68
1.92

1.57
(3)
1.64
1.92
1.73
1.88
1.65
1.58
1.60

1.77
2. 02
2.10
2.37
1.97
2.07
1.96
1.79
1.81

1.65
2.14
2. 02
2. 42
1.84
2.04
2.18
1.80
1.86

1.84
1.86
2.14
2.33
2.03
2.10
1.51
1.79
1.77

1.76
1.63
1.85
2. 20
1.72
1.81
1.93
1.62
1.66

1. 75
1.63
1.95
2.16
1.68
1.78
1.86
1.65
1.70

1.77
1.64
1.73
2. 25
1.75
1.85
2. 05
1.57
1.61

(3)
1.45
1.65
1.85
1.67
1.69
1.87
1.64
1.71

2. 25
1.99
1.82
1.84
2.06
2.01
2. 03
2. 08
2.03

1.83
1.68
1.67
1.83
1.80
1.63
1.69
1.65
1. 59

2.13
1.73
1.82
1.80
1.93
1.92
1.66
1.48
1.58

1.94
1.69
1.65
1.83
1.81
1.67
1.70
1.50
1.64

2.23
1.78
2. 01
1.76
2. 06
2.17
1.62
1.44
1.54

1.72
1.48
1.54
(3)
1.09
(3)
(3)
(3)
1. 61

2.02
(3)
(3)
(3;
(3)
(3)
(3)
(3)
1.21

1.30
.82
1.64
1.29
2.12
1.40
1. 27
.79

1.28
.80
1.66
1.30
2. 22
1.40
1.27
.75

1.38
.85
(3)
(3)
1.99
(3)
(3)
.80

1.54
1.03
(3)
1.30
1.68
1.40
1.41
.98

1.41
.83
1.27
(3)
(3)
(3)
(3)
(3)

1. 41
1.48
1.50
1.24
1.25
1.14
1.10
1.38
1. 47
1.32

1.38
1.52
1.55
1. 21
1.24
1.16
1.13
1.39
1.39
(3)
1.52
(3)
1. 53

1. 49
(3)
1.49
1. 27
1.28
1.12
1.04
1.38
1. 57
1.56

1.45
1.30
1. 35
1. 23
1.33
1.15
1. 21
1.40
1. 40
1.55

1.15
(3)
1.31
.99
1.04
.99
.91
1.19
1.16
1.24

1.53
1.38
1.33

1.47
1.61
1. 44

1.17
1.22
1.24

1.38
1.54
1.52
1.53
1.35

1.29
1.45
1.35
1.45
1.33
1.42
1.63
1.52
1.35
.93

1.24
1.44
1.43
1. 32
1.42
(3)
1.50
(3)
1. 49
1.24

1.12
1. 41
1.12
1. 41
(3)
1. 21
1.39
1.24
(3)
.93

1.77
1.41
1.52
1.58

1.93
1.94
1.72
2.03

2.06
1.62
(3)
1.54
1.56
00
1.63
00
1.64

1.80
(3)
00
00
00
(3)
00
(3)
1.49

2.42
2. 07
00
2. 00
00
1.89
(3)
1.80

1.99
1.79
1.74
1.84
1.91
1.75
1.79
1.83
1.71

1.40
.89
1. 25
1.10
1. 63
(3)
1.08
(3)

1.45
1.08
1.69
1.18
1. 77
1.08
1.12
.96

1.41
.79
1.39
1.01
(3)
1.34
.91
(3)

1.93
(3)
(3)
1.32
(3)
(3)
(3)
(3)

1.64
.94
1.65
1. 43
2. 09
1. 25
1.37
1.03

1.65
.93
1.64
1.43
2. 07
1.25
1.37
.98

1.63
.98
(3)

1.41
1.40
1.44
1.20
1.37
1.08
1.01
1.26
1.24
1.10

(3)
(3)
(3)
1.29
1.36
1.19
1. 08
1.30
1.30
1.24

1.34
1.17
1.32
1.21
1.28
1.21
1.14
1. 41
1.41
1.31

1.53
(3)
1.68
1.47
1.56
1.23
1.17
1.60
1.82
1.47

1. 40
1,20
1.54

1.56
1.35
1.65

1.61
1.53

1.53
(3)
1.43
1.36
1.65
1.25
1.23
1.57
1.84
(3)
1.89
(3)

( 3)

1.51
1.51
1.50
1.40
1.59
1.26
1.20
1.56
1.79
(3)
1.83
1.58
1.97

1.47
1.80
1.57
1.47
1.53
1.29

1. 28
1. 22
1.41

1.22
(3)
1.41
1.19
1.37
1.17
.97
1.32
1.15
(3)
1. 41
1.32
1.55

(3)

( 3)

1.13
1.32
1.19
1.20
1.12
1.30
1.52
1.19
1.14
1.04

1.27
1.33
1. 22
1.10
1.41
(3)
1.48
1.41
1.32
.94

1.40
1.43
1. 39
1.58
1.42
1.18
1.36
1.24
1.24
1.10

1.15
1.36
1.27
1.19
1.17
1.46
1.58
1.23

1.65
1.60
1.74
1.34
1.56
1.61
(3)
(3)
(3)
1.16

1.54
1.48
1.80
1.59
1.65
2. 08
1.84
1.87
1.74
1.00

1.58
1.56
1. 97
1.61
1. 72
2.10
1.64
(3)
1.41
1.05

1. 53
1. 46
1.76
1.58
1.59

OO

$2.11
2.01

(3)

(3)
(3)
(3)
1.13

(3)

(3)

(3)
(3)
(3)
(3)

1.91
2.08

(3)
(3)

(3)
(3)
(3)
(3)
(3)
(3)

(3)
1.12
1.54

Plant occupations— Women

Coat fabrication:
Basters, body-lining and facing, hand_.
Basters, canvas, hand________ _____
Basters, collar, hand______________
Button sewers, hand---------------------Buttonhole makers, hand__________
Finishers, hand___ _____________ Pairers and turners. .................... .........
Sewing-machine operators4_________
Basting edges_________________
Buttonhole making._ ______ ...
Felling body-lining, bottom and
side______ _______________
Joining shoulders, cloth_____ ____
Joining side seams_____________
Joining under-collar, joining sleeve
lining, or piecing pockets______
Jump-stitch operations_________
Padding collar and lapels_______
Piping edges__________________
Sewing darts (cloth)____________
Sewing edge tape______________
Sewing in sleeve_______________
Stitching edges________________
Taping armholes______________
Thread trimmers (cleaners)_________




(3)

1.13

1. 54
(3)

( 3)

1.55
(3)
(3)

( 3)

1.93
(3)
1.93
.97

1.53
1.36
1. 40
1.33
1.49
1.43
1.49
1.34
1.54
1.62
1.45
1.35
1. 01

( 3)

1.58
1. 34
1. 35
1.08

31

Straight-time average hourly ea rn in g sselected occupations in men's and boys' suit and coat manufacturing establish­
ments in 9 cities , August-Sept ember 1948— Continued

Baltimore

Occupation
Plant occupations—Women —
Continued
Trouser fabrication:
Sewers, hand (benchworkers, finishers).
Sewing machine operators 4.
Attaching fly__
Attaching waistband_
Attaching zipper............. ........
Joining inseams..........
Joining outseams_____
Making pockets__ .
Piecing flys____________
Serging---------------------- "...
Sewing on waistband lining____
Stitching pockets. _ __ . ___
Tacking. ___ _ _ .
Thread trimmers __________
Inspectors, final (examiners)...... .....
Office occupations—Women
Bookkeepers, hand. ... ... .
Clerks, payroll_____
Clerk-typists________ _________
Stenographers, general____________

New York
Philadelphia
Los
Bos­ Chi­ Cin­
St.
cin­
An­
Con­ ton cago nati geles All Regu­ Con­ All Regu­ Con­ Roch­
ester Louis
All Regu­
lar tract
lar tract shops lar tract
shops shops2
shops
shops
shops 2 shops
shops 2 shops

$1.09
1.23
1. 26
1.34
1.23
1.33
1.06
1.26
1.24
1.25
1.22
1.23
1.20
1.03
1.06

$1.04
1.21
1. 25
1. 40
1.23
(3)
1.02
1.19
1.22
1.20
1.20
1.14
1.23
.97
1.04

$1.16
1.27
(3)
1.27
(3)
(3)
1.15
1. 36
0
1.34
1.28
1.37
1.15
1.13
1.11

0
$1.43
1.41
1.53
1. 27
0
1.50
1.43
0
1.31
1.39
0
1.53
.98
1.14

$1.15
1.43
1.47
1.51
1.62
1.49
1.42
1.38
1.54
1.37
1. 52
1.46
1.50
1.13
.95

$1.08
1.24
0
0
1.16
1.30
1.30
1.26
1.16
1.25
1.38
1.35
1.38
1.20
0

$1.35
1.42
0
0
1.50
1. 67
0
1.65
1.61
1.49
0
0
1.61
1.09
1.24

$1.28
1.51
1.68
1.59
1.64
1.54
1.84
1.73
1.70
1.37
1.66
1.40
1.52
1.10
1.31

1.23 1.22 1.32 1.28 1.21 1.08 1.50 1.47
.96 .95 (3)
.86 1.08 1.04 1.52 1.11
.83 .83 0
.73 .98 .78 1.05 1.00
.97 .97 0
1.05 1.20 1.05 1.15 1.13

1Includes incentive pay but excludes premiumpay for overtime and night
work.
2Includes establishments having sewing operations performed on a con­
tract basis in addition to those performing all manufacturing operations.

$1.47
1.63
1.78
1.67
2.01
1.61
0
1.73
1.56
1.40
1.67
1.53
1.38
1.07
1.29

$1. 27
1.45
1.61
0
1.42
0
(3)
1.73
0
0
1.65
1.24
1.61
1.12
1.31

$1.16
1.44
1. 58
1.52
1.65
1. 57
1.62
1. 51
1. 56
1.24
1.40
1.30
1.42
. 97
1.15

$1.14
1.43
0
1.61
1.61
0
1.51
1.56
1.41
1. 22
1.53
1.31
1.21
. 95
1.08

$1.17
1.45
1.61
1.47
1.68
l.0m
1.45
1. 66
1. 24
1.36
1.30
1. 49
. 98
1.22

$1.16 $1.01
1.32 1.14
1.41 1.13
1.34 1.19
1. 50
1.38 01.11
1.30 1.14
1.31 1.15
1.12
0
1. 26 1.16
1. 23 0
1.13
0
1. 23 1.17
1 16 0
0
0

1. 56 1.19 1.31 1.34 1. 21 0
1.12 1.05 1.00 .97 1.05 1.07
1.00 0
.93 .93 0
1.03
1.13 0
.98 .98 0
1.05

3Insufficient number of workers to justify presentation of an average.
4Includes workers on other sewing-machine operations in addition to those
shown separately

32



1.03
. 90
0
.94

U. S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: I 9SI