Scholte operated his own tailoring house on
Savile Row in
Mayfair, London. He served as an apprentice tailor to the
Household Cavalry and adapted three characteristics of their military uniform into: wide shoulders, roomy armholes, and narrow waists. In 1917,
Tailor & Cutter magazine praised the outstanding craftsmanship of Scholte's tailoring at his shop on Savile Row, which overlooked
Henry Poole & Co.: Scholte invented the
drape suit for
Prince of Wales (later Edward VIII and the Duke of Windsor). Scholte was the duke's principal tailor from 1919 until his own death in 1948. The looser, draped cut was in contrast to the tighter, more restrictive clothing of the
Victorian era, and proved extremely influential in 20th-century men's fashion. It created a "revolution" in men's fashion. Several of the Duke of Windsor's jackets made by Scholte are in the collection of the
Metropolitan Museum of New York's
Costume Institute. ==Personal life==