| Page 2 of 2 < |
Entrepreneur Finds Perfect Fit
Craig M. Muckle of Bowie, left, selects fabric for a shirt with the assistance of Kwab Asamoah, president and founder of Kustom Looks Clothier in Landover.
(By Jahi Chikwendiu -- The Washington Post)
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
|
"A lot of people thought he was crazy," said Wylace Liggon, Asamoah's freshman-year roommate at Morgan State who joined Kustom Looks as a partner late last year.
Asamoah did well enough that he purchased a 32-acre farm near Brandywine that he dubbed AshantiLand, named after his ancestral tribe in Ghana. It became a hub for big parties, including "Blackstock," a summer 2002 festival.
A friend, Dwayne Rawlings, was known for his flashy suits. Asamoah approached him about the maker, and Rawlings put him in touch with Umesh "Sammy" Balani, the owner of a Bangkok factory that produces high-end formal clothing.
Asamoah bought a few suits for himself, and Balani mentioned that he was looking for a pipeline into the U.S. market.
Asamoah's consulting job at the time paid well but he missed chasing the sale. Curious, he asked the factory owner how he could help. In a hastily arranged trip a year later, he met Balani in New York City and got a two-hour crash course on the tailoring business.
Just measure the clients and send some photographs, he was told, and Balani would take care of the rest. He saw it as an interesting side project, so he persuaded a few friends to try it out.
As promised, the suits came back a few weeks later, but something got lost in the translation. Pants were too short, jackets didn't fit and several suits had to be sent back. One of his first clients was a vice president at Freddie Mac, his former employer, and it took several tries to get the suit right.
"People had an interest in the product, but the product was terrible," Asamoah said. "In the first 12 months of this business, anybody else would have gotten out."
Over time, he perfected the measurement system, plotting measurement points all along the torso to ensure shirts, jackets and pants fit to form. He devised an online form that sends the numbers directly to the factory workers, none of whom speak English. He circled different body types to indicate a client's posture, such as "stomach out" or "shoulders forward."
He explains suits in terms of angles and curves, the way light bounces off ties and silks. It sounds like one of his physics classes from college.
"It's all about science, electromagnetic theory . . . it's a formula," he says, gesturing at the pinstriped suits and silk blouses on display in the store. "I'm a nerd by trade, don't let it fool you."
He and his partner have only recently been able to start drawing a steady salary. At his house in Bowie, he still has an alteration bin where he keeps clothes to be sent for alteration, right next to his laundry basket.
The Amway experience influenced the way he approaches clients. Up until this past spring, when he got his store near the New Carrollton Orange Line stop, he was mostly making house calls and showing up at Prince George's benefit dinners and business galas.
Most clients said they met him after being drawn to his flashy suits.
"He's all over the place, there's no question about it," said Pepco president Graham, who has worked with Asamoah on two suits and a line of golfing wear. "He's someone you just want to work with. At the end of the day he just wants to satisfy you."
"It's so convenient and so cool to have somebody come to your office and your house," said Harris of ABC 7 News. "You can get addicted to that kind of stuff, especially if you're a clothes-horse kind of person."
On a recent evening in his store -- an old dance studio tucked away in a corporate office park -- David Byrd, an aide to Jack Johnson, tried on the first of three suits he was buying, fumbling with a small jacket pocket. It's a watch pocket, Asamoah explains.
"A watch pocket? I've never seen that before," Byrd says, looking at himself in the mirror.
"Welcome to high fashion, Mr. Byrd," Asamoah says with a laugh.
Byrd met Asamoah and his partner Liggon at a dinner last year, at the time unaware that his predecessor in the county, Alfonso Cornish, and another aide, Derrick Green, were also customers.
"If you wear this and you start getting compliments, you know to let us know," he says to a female customer who walks out with a red silk blouse.
"If a guy has never had a custom suit before, it's like he's never been out to fine dining," says Doc Walker, who wears the suits on "Doc Walker's ProView" on News Channel 8. "People can tell the difference. It's your game-day outfit."
Sitting at his desk in a three-button, beige glen plaid suit with a baby-blue pinstripe, measuring tape around his neck, Asamoah says that despite the high-profile clients he has nabbed so far, his target market is more modest.
"At the end of the day, we want to serve the corporate 9-to-5 professional," he says. "Whether it's Michael Steele or Anthony Williams, in the end you're human. Everybody needs clothes."





