My answer will depend on which tools you have reference. If you mean needles, these would have been brought over from England or whatever was the starting place for the colonists, at least until a blacksmith was able to replicate the needles. Scissors would have been handled the same way. Things like this would not have been beyond a good smith's ability. Thread would have been spun by anyone able to handle the work. I hopes this answers some of your inquiries.
yes many colonial tailors were trained by there parents and their parents were taught by their parents
About 50 cent a day.
A tailor in colonial times was neither rich or poor, but lived a modest life. The tailors in that time period were needed by both the rich citizens and the poor.
Yes, there were. Tailors and barbers used scissors during the colonial time period.
And Bakers
What tools would the tailors use in colonial times? They would use scissors, needle and thread and measuring devices, such as rulers, measuring tapes, etc. .
yes many colonial tailors were trained by there parents and their parents were taught by their parents
they were good
they got their tools from France and the garbage
Tailors now use seing machines to sew instead of sewiing by hand
no!
About 50 cent a day.
A tailor in colonial times was neither rich or poor, but lived a modest life. The tailors in that time period were needed by both the rich citizens and the poor.
The plural possessive form of "tailors" is "tailors'." In English, when a plural noun ends in "s," you simply add an apostrophe after the "s" to indicate possession. So, in this case, if you are referring to something belonging to multiple tailors, you would write "the tailors' tools" or "the tailors' shop."
Yes, there were. Tailors and barbers used scissors during the colonial time period.
And Bakers
What tools would the tailors use in colonial times? They would use scissors, needle and thread and measuring devices, such as rulers, measuring tapes, etc. .