this old thread refreshed my hatred.

i stand my my opinion from 4 years ago: old people's clothes. ugly like hell. i do not allow chacabanas in our house. when my in laws bring more and more shirts for miesposo chacabanas go directly to the "give away" bin. hateful wear.
Chacabanas have evolved a lot. I remember when they ALL had 4 pockets and people would actually stuff things into them, making the whole thing looking baggy.
Then, there are "cheaply" made ones with only few pleads in the bands (alforzas) and the tailor made ones you see "la gente" and politicians wear. Even the cheap ones will run from DOP 800 on to DOP 2000 at local stores which carry mass produced and now mostly imported (yes, from China too

) "imitations".
Tailor made, Christian Lagares, Tony Boga, Hipolito etc in Santo Domingo, Robert Rover (Glam), Capellan in Santiago will run DOP 4000 to DOP 6000 depending on the fabric used. The fabric is the problem here... there is no quality shirt fabric made locally... most is bought from traveling Italian vendors who peddle quality brand shirt fabrics virtually door to door but at exorbitant prices. Many customers will buy their future shirt's fabrics at specialty stores in NYC or Miami on their trips. Rex Fabrics on Calle 8 in Miami is a typical place to find the Latino "Farandula" buying (I ran into "Papa" Hipolito there). These fabrics will run from USD 24.oo/yard on upwards (the sky is obviously the limit and to some, the more expensive, the better!). It takes 4 to 4 yards to make a "M" Cahcabana/Guayabera depending on length of sleeves and what type of cuffs and how wide you want your "Alforzas" since there is a new trend to make 3" to 3.5" wide Alforzas (the pleaded vertical bands).
Tailor made Guayaberas go between USD 200 to well into the 500's in Miami specialty stores (NOT the CubaVera outlet at Miami Airport, obviously). So, to some, paying up to DOP 6000 a pop may seem cheap.
The Alforzas are pleaded using a special machine. One can not even blink with an eye when making them. Often bands are lost and have to be re-done... eating up additional fabric (which is expensive as mentioned).
The new design trend has been LED by DOMINICAN tailors (I think they were the first ones to play around with the wider, sportier more "flamboyant" Alforzas). Often only 2 or 1 pocket are used. You can find sporty "slim fit" cuts that will flatter a more toned body. More work with 2 ro 3 different fabrics and colors. Stripes are often used to make the Alforzas stand out further.
While Hipolito and Christian Lagares and a couple of others in Santo Domigo cater more to the more "classy elite", Tony Boga has made a name for himself among the more "hip" crowd, musicians and artists and affluent youths with a little wilder designs and more colorful fabrics.
A few of the more "avangardiste" examples from Tony Boga in Santo Domingo (from his FaceBook page).
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I have bought Chacabanas from most Dominican manufacturers/designers. Some are their own designs, others my own. Really NOWADAYS, there is a lot of room for creativity. Some designers are more open minded and capable to listen than others.
... J-D.