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			 Customers are asked to wear a tight-fitting tank top and step 
			inside a changing room equipped with 14 infrared sensors - eight in 
			the front and six at the back. 
			 
			The machine instructs the customer to stand at a certain spot and 
			hold still while it does its work in under 10 seconds. 
			 
			The data, including not just measurements of length and 
			circumference, but also angles, is instantaneously delivered to an 
			app on the tablet. 
			 
			Matthew Lee, business development director at Charmston (Holdings) 
			Limited, owner of the Gay Giano tailor, said the technology helps 
			revive a trade that has seen a shortage of young tailors entering 
			the industry. 
			  
			
			  
			 
			"There's a huge disconnect between these traditional craftsmen or 
			craftswomen and the next generation. There's no one taking over. So 
			we felt that, if that's the case, it's either a dying trade or we 
			can revitalize it with technology that could enhance or keep a 
			better record of their knowledge," Lee said. 
			 
			Soddy Cheng, a tailor consultant who has been making suits for 
			decades, said there are only roughly 200 tailors in Hong Kong, a 
			city of 7 million people famed for its high-quality tailoring. 
			 
			Much of the business has moved across the border - it is now common 
			practice for tailoring shops to have their orders made in workshops 
			in mainland China, where labor is less expensive. 
			 
			Cheng said the body scanner has only replaced the one step in making 
			a tailor-made suit. 
			 
			"The tailors usually don't meet the customers. But this 3D 
			technology can help them visualize the customers' body shape," he 
			said. 
			 
			"So during the process of making the suit, they can easily imagine 
			the customers' body shapes, and also things like do they crouch? Do 
			they stick their chest out? Do they have big bellies? These ideas 
			can help them during the process," Cheng added. 
			 
			
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			One customer, Alan Chan, who wore a custom made Gay Giano suit that 
			he ordered after being measured by the 3D body scanner, said the 
			scanner seemed efficient, as modifications were needed not for the 
			fit, but the design - adding he planned on ordering again. 
			 
			"Well, efficient-wise, of course being scanned inside a changing 
			room is a lot more efficient. I've tried the traditional measuring 
			method," he said. 
			 
			"It felt more personal, but it took up more of my time. And I felt 
			like the 3D managed to measure more thoroughly and more parts of 
			myself. If I had to go to a traditional tailor and have myself 
			measured the way the computer did, I think that would take much 
			longer," Chan added. 
			 
			Gay Giano claims it is the be the first shop in Hong Kong to utilize 
			a 3D scanner in the business of custom made suits, although other 
			tailors in the city have also claimed this accolade, including 
			Isabella Wren, and other companies making clothes are adopting the 
			technology as well in womenswear and lingerie. 
			 
			Body scanners using 3D technology are also being used in other 
			cities across the world, including New York and London. 
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] 
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