After a year and a half of apprenticeship he begins his own path: the collaborators, the workers and even the tailor’s offices change, but in the meantime the young increasingly skilled: learn the secrets and techniques from the tailors he works with.
In Bologna he learns from master Avella, who is Ferrè’s personal tailor, to make the jacket with pleats that end in the pocket and acquire a more international view of the jacket.
With so much hard work the tailor Carfora improves his art and continues to learn more and more day by day.
Today the Carfora style takes the form of an atypical Anglo-Neapolitan line, creating light jackets that do not have excessively broad shoulders but concave. These jackets are made with careful and laborious iron work, a high center of gravity which together with the angle of the skull, optically slants the figure upwards.
For the internal realization a linen cloth is used to have a high transpiration of the garments.