Silk and skill: Meet the Chinese sisters who’ve made Malay kebayas in Geylang Serai for 40 years

Silk and skill: Meet the Chinese sisters who’ve made Malay kebayas in Geylang Serai for 40 years


SINGAPORE – Mandarin chatter fills the small shop, mingling with the rustle of pattern paper, the soft nip of shears and the steady whir of sewing machines. Yet, when customers drop by with clothes to alter or ideas for custom pieces, tailors Cassandra and Carol Chong switch effortlessly to Malay to discuss fabrics, cut and fit.

The sisters are familiar faces at Joo Chiat Complex, where they have run Cassandra Fashions for more than 40 years.

The shopping centre in the heart of Geylang Serai – one of Singapore’s oldest Malay enclaves – is known for its traditional Malay goods. And the Chong sisters are believed to be the first Chinese tailors here to specialise in traditional Malay women’s attire, crafting garments such as baju kurung and kebayas. They also sell outfits for men and boys, altering them if necessary.

Their shop has been especially busy in the past months, as business peaks each year ahead of Hari Raya Aidilfitri. Families would order sets of matching outfits in coordinated fabrics, sometimes with several outfits per person.

“Typically, it takes about three weeks to make a set of clothes, and up to three months when orders pile up before Hari Raya Puasa,” says 70-year-old Cassandra in Mandarin, explaining that she does not offer express services.

Clients do not mind the wait. Some regulars do not even try their new clothes to see if they fit. “They say, ‘No need, I trust you’,” says Carol, 60.

The Chong sisters grew up helping out in the shop their father opened in 1976 in this neighbourhood and learnt Malay from interacting with customers. Back then, they sold sarongs, batik, wigs and chaddar, the bedsheets that Malays often purchase for weddings.

Madam Carol Chong (left) and Madam Cassandra Chong are believed to be the first Chinese tailors to specialise in traditional Malay women’s attire, at their shop in Joo Chiat Complex.

ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY

As the business flourished, Cassandra – the third of five sisters – decided to learn tailoring, to expand the shop’s offerings, as customers frequently asked for not just alterations, but also custom-made garments.

The family eventually pivoted their business and in 1984, they moved into the newly built Joo Chiat Complex. They have been there ever since.

Carol, the youngest of the sisters, came on board later after her husband closed his fast-food business. “That is why the signboard does not have my name,” she jokes in Mandarin.

These days, Cassandra mainly drafts patterns with customers’ measurements and cuts fabrics while Carol assembles and stitches the garments. A team of seamstresses, some of whom have worked with them for the past 25 years, helps share the workload.

Over the decades, the sisters have dressed generations of customers for festive seasons and special occasions, from weddings and birthdays to full-month celebrations for newborns.

They remember their regulars’ preferences and keep the paper patterns drawn to their measurements.

A customer walks into the shop while the sisters are chatting with The Straits Times, and they greet her warmly as she introduces her brother’s young daughter, who has tagged along.

The customer needs a grey outfit for an occasion on Saturday – something off the rack that the sisters will alter to fit her perfectly.



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