MisrahBook a home fitting

The Craft

A young workshop, an old craft.

A kandura is a simple-looking garment. A good one is not. The difference is in the measurement, the cut, and the finishing. That work takes time and the right hands.

01 · Measured by hand

Every fitting begins with a master tailor measuring you with a tape: chest, waist, hip, sleeve, length, neck, and a half-dozen smaller numbers that decide how the kandura sits. For new customers, we ask you to bring an existing kandura you like the fit of. We use it as the reference for your file.

02 · Cut on the table

Your fabric is unrolled on a flat table and cut by hand to your measurements. Not from a pattern catalogue. Not by a machine. Every kandura is its own pattern.

03 · Sewn by one tailor

From the moment your fabric is cut, one tailor owns the work: the sleeves, the collar, the hem, the buttonholes. We don't pass it along a line. Consistency of hand matters more than speed.

04 · Finished and signed

Before the kandura leaves the workshop, the master tailor checks the work and signs the job. Quality is tied to a person, not a station number. If something isn't right, we know whose to ask.