Beautiful jacket and excellent fit overall. I think it looks slightly long, but my preference is for shorter jackets so take that with a grain of salt.
If you really like the Mulholland, I would go one of 3 directions.
1. Get the closest thing you possibly can to it. That will not be any of the other Japanese makers. As someone who does actually like the Mulholland and owned 3 of them in the past, the other Japanese copies won't get the...
How this fell to me given I wasn't on here for a couple days is beyond me, but I'm so glad it did. Huge thanks to @ton312 for thinking of me and suggesting the pm!
I echo what has already been asked: is your weight settled now? As someone who lost weight a few years back, I can say from experience that buying a nice jacket during that process isn't a great idea. Everything I bought mid weight loss has had to be sold. Make sure you're around where you want...
I have had some boots from a couple of those makers and they're solid, though with very iffy quality control.
The fanboyism is disgusting, especially the logic behind it. Some of them genuinely think that nicely made boots are worse than boots with bad qc because "mUh MaNhOoD"
You're missing the blind tribalism fanboyism of pacific northwest boot fans. Don't you realize that wearing this jacket makes you more of a man?
It's like how each performance part sticker on your car adds 10 horsepower. Wearing this jacket adds 10 testosterone to each man who puts it on. A...
Thanks, guys! Very happy with all three. The Golden Fleece is the most special, but I do believe the Sportclad is the best fit, though the Windward is quite good too. Somehow it's the only jacket I've ever owned that might have slightly too short sleeves on me which I didn't know was possible...
Three vintage '40s jackets arrived while I was in Mexico.
Golden Fleece leather and wool, brown Windward, and Sportclad black motorcycle jacket. They all fit quite well overall. The Golden Fleece sadly had been hung improperly so the shoulders are messed up, but hopefully they settle down a...
Fit. For walking, laced boots are more secure in general and you can semi customize the fit by adjusting how tight or loose the laces are. I much prefer the look of engineers, but hiking in engineers would likely lead to twisted ankles more than hiking in lace up boots for example.
Also...
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