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Jeans in The Genes - Family Artisans in The Cévennes - France
Jeans in The Genes - Family Artisans in The Cévennes - France
Jeans in The Genes - Family Artisans in The Cévennes - France
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“I wear my own jeans and like all denim purists, I don’t wash them often. A pair of
raw jeans shouldn’t be washed frequently. For my year, I rotate between four or
five pairs of jeans which I wash about three times. What damages jeans is not
wear, it’s washing, especially in a machine: for an hour, it rubs fibre against fibre
and erodes it. A pair of jeans washed too often will quickly fade.”
With his singing accent from the Cévennes region, Julien Tuffery, sporting denim
from head to toe and a fashionable haircut and beard, knows what he is talking
about: at 35, he’s the dynamic owner of Atelier Tuffery, the oldest and last
manufacturer of jeans in France. Passionate and talkative, he is the heir of a long
line of master tailors of jeans.
“Exactly 130 years ago, in 1892, my great-grandfather, Célestin Tuffery, had the
idea of using the raw indigo-dyed fabric then being manufactured in Nîmes to
make work trousers,” Julien proudly recounts. “Because it was strong and cheap,
it was ideal for making industrial clothing for the influx of workers building
railroads nearby. He was only 17 when he opened his workshop in Florac and he
went himself to buy fabric in Nîmes, 100km away.”
Thanks to this ‘de Nîmes’ – or denim as we now know it – fabric, Célestin Tuffery
probably invented jeans in France, at about the same time that Levi Strauss, on
the other side of the Atlantic, had already started to make jeans for California
gold-diggers.
Today, Julien’s workshop is located in the very town where his great-grandfather
opened his factory: Florac-Trois-Rivières, a picturesque village in the Lozère
department, in the heart of the Cévennes National Park, amidst cattle, sheep and
goat farms.
But times have changed: Atelier Tuffery now makes ‘eco-friendly’ jeans bearing
the ‘Made in France’ label. Entirely handmade in facilities combining traditional
savoir-faire and modern technology, three-quarters of production is sold online
and the rest in the on-site boutique. Ranging from €119 to €290 per pair and
more for custom-made organic cotton models, the jeans are guaranteed for
seven-day delivery in 28 countries. The clientele of this flourishing business are
young urbanites who want better quality and who reject products not coming
from a ‘short supply chain’ alongside jeans costing €10 in a fast-fashion store.
“We make 40,000 pairs of jeans annually, three per cent of sales in France,”
explains Julien. “It’s a micro-drop in the fashion ocean, but a drop growing each
year. In 2020 and 2021, because of Covid-19, internet sales have exploded. Ten
years ago, the ‘Made in France’ label wasn’t fashionable. Today, our order book is
full.”
Yet Atelier Tuffery and its state-of-the-art website almost didn’t exist. In the
1950s, Célestin’s son, Jean-Alphonse, succeeded in transforming jeans into a
fashion product, following in the footsteps of American brands. But in the 1980s,
the company, renamed Tuff’s, was hard-hit by Asian and North African
competition. In 1985, it was doomed to decline and only a few seamstresses and
Jean-Alphonse’s children – Jean- Pierre, Jean-Jacques and Norbert – remained.
They had to close the workshop and kept only a simple boutique, which struggled
for years. Fortunately, in 2016, Julien, Jean-Jacques’ son, and his wife Myriam,
both engineers, decided to quit their lucrative jobs to take over the family
business. Their objective was ambitious: to revive it at all costs and perpetuate
the unique know-how passed on by Célestin Tuffery.
“Initially, my father and uncles tried to dissuade us,” says Julien. “They had
endured too much themselves. But we wanted a meaningful project which would
also be ecological, societal, human and economic. We were lucky because they
had the wisdom to say, ‘Listen Julien and Myriam, we are completely out of touch
with Facebook, Instagram, the internet and e-commerce. If you want the
business, take it, we won’t interfere’. Then they showed us their hands and said,
‘but you should know that we can be pretty damn useful!’.”
Before beginning the journey, Julien and Myriam did economic studies on the
jeans market and consumer trends. Since 2016, the picture has hardly changed:
France, with 90m jeans sold annually, represents ten per cent of the European
market. Only four countries account for more than 80 per cent of the production
imported into Europe: Bangladesh, Turkey, China and Pakistan. When they reach
the consumer, the jeans have often travelled over 65,000km.
Convinced that new consumer trends focusing on eco-ethics and buying local
offered an opportunity, Julien and Myriam figured they had a card to play in the
‘Made in France’ niche. Now owners of the company, they changed Tuff’s to its
historic name Atelier Tuffery and revived it: sewing patterns formerly drawn
individually were replaced by digitised templates and the product range, which
was limited to trousers, expanded to include skirts, aprons and shirts. Their
marketing strategy targets end customers through social networks, influencers
and a newsletter. Top priority: sourcing locally where possible and marketing the
brand so the majority of value goes back to the workshop and not distributors.
The hands that make them are those of 12 seamsters and seamstresses in the
sewing workshop. “Each one carries out six or seven different operations hourly,
the time it takes to make a pair of jeans from A to Z,” explains Julien, who is proud
to show people around his workshop, which is always open for customer visits.
“Today, as no one wants to work on an assembly line, we train our staff to be
multi-skilled. After a year and a half of training, which is a long time and very
expensive, each worker knows how to do everything. It goes without saying that
our employees are extremely precious to us.”
The valued team are trained so they know all aspects of the job
This year Julien and Myriam, who have two children, will start construction to
increase the workshop’s size fourfold and they hope to continue hiring. However,
growing too much is out of the question. “We don’t want to embark on large
industrial projects that would reproduce the same mistakes that led the industry
to bankruptcy,” says Julien.
“We’re aiming for 100,000 jeans annually and then we’ll stop growing. We prefer
to rely on common sense.” In common sense logic, Atelier Tuffery doesn’t
manufacture anything in advance. “What’s the point of taking pieces from our
workshop that will be sold a year later?” asks Julien.
Tuffery has a new lease of life under the stewardship of Julien and Myriam
His jeans are so timeless that they can last for years and even be repaired. “If
done right, a pair of jeans can last a very long time,” says Julien. “Sometimes we’ll
fix a button on five-year-old jeans in pristine condition. But it depends how they
are used and on the morphology of the people wearing them. For example, big
thighs tend to wear them out very quickly on the inside. So, we repair, we don’t
hesitate to patch them up because a pair of jeans, if you accept its ageing and
patching, is in itself immortal.”
For now, production remains limited, from 30 to 250 pieces daily, and Julien’s 72-
year-old father and uncles continue to come in every day. Jeans are their whole
life and their passion. By their presence, they teach young craftsmen the trade.
The whole secret of the longevity of the Tuffery workshop is based on passing
down tradition.
“What’s funny,” adds Julien, “is that we still do the same job as my great-
grandfather did: master tailor. I often enjoy saying that the little success of Atelier
Tuffery is the marriage of a 130-year-old trade with all the modern resources of a
young start-up built to communicate, digitalise, sell and talk to customers. And it
works incredibly well.”
Incidentally, Julien and his team have made the ultimate tribute to great-
grandfather Célestin: with its classic straight cut and high waist, the company’s
historical model bears his name. Timeless, you see!
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June 2, 2022
By Patrice Bertrand
A former foreign correspondent in the United States for leading French newspapers, Patrice
is currently based in the south of France where he writes for various magazines.
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