Good Thing 1: Just back from picking up my new FQHH Stockman, after the last one came with sleeves at least 1" less than specced. Interestingly, this time the cordovan is a much richer, darker colour, which is fine by me. A nice touch was that I was offered a choice of two identical Stockmans, as when Julie had finished the first one she accidentally put a 1" scratch on the hem, felt guilty about it and proceeded to make me another one blemish free. I actually took the original as it just "felt" better. All jackets get scratched over time, so that wasn't an issue to me.
Good Thing 2: After Holly's worrying announcement about steer being sold as FQHH, my nagging doubts about the HWM I got in June increased. I took that down this morning and Ken pronounced it a monstrosity (or words to that effect). The jacket which I thought looked fine, but felt and looked a bit different to my vintage FQHH has turned out to be a shocking mixture of both steer and horse, with badly matched colour and grain to boot (to the professional eye), which had somehow slipped through QA.
Ken was mortified, and suggested I try on a stock steer Cordovan in my size, which I did and actually preferred the look and cut to the original, so I just took that as a replacement for the monstrous hybrid. Given that Ken and the team had to have a really good look to confirm the difference between steer and horse, I decided I'd rather take the steer now than wait for a horse which looks pretty much identical. It seems the simplest way to tell the difference is by weight, rather than appearance.
Anyway, here's a close-up of my brand new cordovan steer and FQHH side-by-side. See if you can tell the difference.
Good Thing 2: After Holly's worrying announcement about steer being sold as FQHH, my nagging doubts about the HWM I got in June increased. I took that down this morning and Ken pronounced it a monstrosity (or words to that effect). The jacket which I thought looked fine, but felt and looked a bit different to my vintage FQHH has turned out to be a shocking mixture of both steer and horse, with badly matched colour and grain to boot (to the professional eye), which had somehow slipped through QA.
Ken was mortified, and suggested I try on a stock steer Cordovan in my size, which I did and actually preferred the look and cut to the original, so I just took that as a replacement for the monstrous hybrid. Given that Ken and the team had to have a really good look to confirm the difference between steer and horse, I decided I'd rather take the steer now than wait for a horse which looks pretty much identical. It seems the simplest way to tell the difference is by weight, rather than appearance.
Anyway, here's a close-up of my brand new cordovan steer and FQHH side-by-side. See if you can tell the difference.
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