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May 26, 2026
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How to Tell Your Tailor Exactly What You Want: A Beginner’s Guide

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Most people who avoid tailors aren’t avoiding the service. They’re avoiding the feeling of standing in a fitting room, not knowing what to say, and walking out unsure whether they asked for the right thing.

But you don’t need to know what a “dart” or an “inseam” is. You don’t even need tailoring vocabulary. You just need to be able to describe your problem, and a good tailor handles the rest.

In this guide, we walk you through every stage of the alterations appointment – before you arrive, during the fitting, and at pickup – so you leave with exactly what you wanted.

Before You Arrive

The most common alteration mistakes happen before the appointment even starts. A little preparation makes a bigger difference than most people expect.

  • Bring the right shoes. This is the most important thing on this list. For any alteration involving length – trousers, dresses, or skirts – bring the exact pair of shoes you plan to wear with the garment, heel height included. A hem measured for flats will sit too short with heels. There’s no fixing that without a second appointment.
  • Wear the right undergarments. For fitted tops, structured dresses, or anything being taken in at the body, wear what you’d normally wear underneath. The fit your tailor creates is calibrated to what’s underneath the garment.
  • Know your event date and say it up front. If the alteration is for a specific occasion, mention the date at drop-off, not at pickup. Not every alteration can be rushed. Your tailor needs to know the deadline before agreeing to take the work.

What to Write Down Before You Go

Jot down three things before your appointment:

  1. The problem in your own words (“the waist is too loose,” “the sleeves drag”)
  2. The occasion or setting where you’ll wear it
  3. The date by which you need it

That’s all the preparation you need.

At the Fitting: How to Describe What You Want

This is the moment most beginners dread: standing in front of a mirror, trying to articulate something they can only feel. Here’s how to handle it.

  • Look first, then talk. Put on the garment and look in the mirror before you say a word. Your tailor will ask what you’d like to change. The honest answer is what you see: “It hangs away from my waist here,” “the shoulder falls off,” “this hem drags”. Whatever you see, that’s your answer.
  • Point. Gesture. Show. You don’t need the right word. You need to point to the right place. “Something here feels off,” while gesturing to the waist, is enough to start the conversation. Tailors work visually; your gesture tells them exactly where to look.
  • Give context for how you’ll wear it. “I wear this to client meetings and need to be comfortable sitting for hours” gives your tailor information that shapes every decision they make, how much to take in, where to place the hem, and how much ease to leave. “Make it fit better” doesn’t.

Before anything gets pinned or marked: ask the tailor to repeat the plan back to you.  

Ask for their opinion. “What do you think would look better, shorter or as-is?” is not a sign of indecision. It’s how you get the benefit of a professional’s eye. A good tailor is a collaborator, not just an executor.

What to Say If You’re Not Sure Where to Start

If you freeze up, try this: “I know something’s off, but I’m not sure how to describe it. Can you just look at it while I’m wearing it and tell me what you see?” That’s a completely valid way to open a fitting, and any experienced tailor will take it from there.

How Long Do Alterations Take?

This is one of the most common questions for which people search before their first alterations appointment, and one worth knowing the answer to before you drop off anything.

Type of AlterationTypical Turnaround
Basic hem (trousers, skirt)24 to 48 hours
Simple fit adjustments (waist, side seams, straps)3 to 5 business days
Complex work (sleeve shortening with buttons, jacket body take in)5 to 10 business days
Rush or same-day (simpler alterations)Ask at drop-off. Available at a premium.

Basic Hem (Trousers, Skirt)
Typical Turnaround
24 to 48 hours
Simple Fit Adjustments (Waist, Side Seams, Straps)
Typical Turnaround
3 to 5 business days
Complex Work (Sleeve Shortening with Buttons, Jacket Body Take In)
Typical Turnaround
5 to 10 business days
Rush or Same-Day (Simpler Alterations)
Typical Turnaround
Ask at drop-off. Available at a premium.

The most important rule: ask for the pickup date before you leave. Don’t assume a timeline. Confirm the specific date, write it down, and if there’s an event involved, say so at drop-off.

Rush Alterations in Las Vegas, Nevada

Las Vegas runs on a last minute schedule. Events, shows, and wardrobe emergencies don’t always come with advance notice. At Tiffany Couture Cleaners, ask about rush turnaround options at the time of drop-off. Availability depends on workload and the complexity of the alteration, but it’s always worth asking if timing is tight.

Before You Leave: The Two-Minute Check

Most beginners skip this step. It’s the most important one.

Try on the garment before you walk out. Always. This isn’t an imposition. It’s standard practice, and any good tailor expects it. It takes two minutes and it’s your last easy opportunity to catch anything that needs adjusting.

Check the specific changes:

  • Hem shortened? Wear your shoes and check the length.
  • Waist taken in? Sit down. Raise your arms. Make sure you can move.
  • Sleeves shortened? Check that they hit the right spot on your wrist.

Say something before you leave, not a week later. If something doesn’t feel right at pickup, that’s the moment to say it. “This doesn’t feel as snug as we discussed” is a reasonable, professional observation, not a complaint. A good tailor would rather fix it on the spot than have you leave unsatisfied.

Concerns raised at pickup are easy to address. Concerns raised a week later are a much harder conversation.

If You Feel Awkward Saying Something

Here’s a script that works: “I just want to double-check before I go, can I try it on quickly?” Then: “Something still feels a little loose at the waist. Is that something we can look at?” Direct, polite, completely appropriate. Any professional tailor welcomes it.

You’re Ready – Here’s Your Next Step

Getting a great alteration doesn’t require knowing any tailoring vocabulary. It requires four things:

  1. Arrive with the right shoes and undergarments
  2. Describe the problem in your own words and point to where it is
  3. Confirm the plan before leaving the garment
  4. Try it on before you walk out at pickup

You Have the Words – We Have the Seamstress – Let’s Fix the Fit of Your Wardrobe

A person ties a pink ribbon around the waist of another person wearing a white blouse and a pink skirt.

You now know exactly how to walk into a fitting room and say what you need. The only thing left is finding a tailor you can actually trust to get it right. That’s where we come in.

At Tiffany Couture Cleaners, our in-house seamstress, Luba, performs every alteration on site, from simple hems and zipper repairs to full tailoring of your finest pieces. We don’t outsource the work or rush the process. Every garment receives the same care and attention to detail, whether it’s a trouser hem or a structured jacket take-in.

Come see us. Fittings are available Tuesday through Saturday, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM, and we’re ready to help you walk out wearing something that actually fits.

📍 Address: Shops at Grand Canyon – 4205 S. Grand Canyon Dr., Suite #1, Las Vegas, NV

📞  Phone: 702.982.2291

🕐 Store Hours: 
Monday - Friday: 7:00 AM to 7:00 PM
Saturday: 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Sunday: Closed

Frequently Asked Questions

Regular washing uses water, detergent, heat, and mechanical agitation, which is effective for most everyday fabrics but damages natural fibers such as wool, silk, and cashmere and distorts the internal construction of structured garments. Dry cleaning uses chemical solvents that dissolve oils and residue without saturating the fabric, which means fibers never swell, contract, or experience the physical stress of a drum cycle.
Inspection and tagging, stain pretreatment, solvent cleaning cycle, post-cleaning inspection, professional finishing, and packaging for pickup. Each step is necessary and each depends on the one before it. Skipping pretreatment produces incomplete stain removal. Skipping post-cleaning inspection releases garments that aren't finished correctly.
Tell them what caused any stains and when they happened. Flag any fabrics or embellishments that need special handling. Mention any repairs you'd like done. State any preferences for pressing or finishing. The more specific information you provide at drop-off, the better the outcome. Don't assume the cleaner will identify everything independently on a first look.
SYSTEMK4 is gentler on fabric than perchloroethylene, which can break down certain fibers and embellishments with repeated exposure. It's also free of toxic chemical residue, which matters for garments worn against skin regularly. For delicate fabrics, structured tailoring, and anything worn frequently, the solvent used in cleaning affects the garment's long-term condition.
For regularly worn suits and blazers, two to three professional cleanings per year is a reasonable baseline. Between cleanings, professional pressing maintains appearance without adding unnecessary solvent exposure. Cleaning too rarely allows body oil accumulation to degrade the fiber over time. Cleaning too frequently subjects the garment's structure to repeated solvent cycles it doesn't need.

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