Andyboy
New in Town
- Messages
- 47
- Location
- Leipzig, Germany
Andrew,
Thanks. Yes, these Wareings are fine jackets.
I often wonder why zips (ostensibly from the same maker and similar periods) have different stopper boxes, some plain (like mine) and some marked as yours is. I have heard it discussed that the bronze-coloured Lightning pullers that you see occasionally go along with plain stopper boxes, but I've seen enough Dot pullers with plain stopper boxes on what appear to be original zips to question this. What do you think?
A slight aside, I've examined a lot of non-AM (e.g. Army) gear from WW2 with the same style of zip (tank suits, airborne smocks etc.) that have the same style of zip but with plain stopper boxes and usually just a broad arrow mark on the puller, so there is no way (AFAIK) to tell who made them. I wonder if Dot produced both types and occasionally the plain (Army) ones found their way into AM jacket production?
By the way, the latest example of this type of stopper box I have ever seen was on a 1960 pattern combat smock dated 1963.
By the way (another small aside) for general information, the same style and size of nickel Lightning zip was used until the late 1990s by a manufacturer of footwear in Somerset. A lot were sold off locally when they finished production and they turn up in NOS condition regularly - an excellent replacement for Irvin sleeve zips, especially if you can get someone to engrave the AM mark and crown on the obverse of the puller.
Nice Arts and Crafts chair Andrew - can't quite make it out, any idea of the designer/maker?
This one belongs to a friend of mine who bought it recently. The previous owner had machine washed it. It has shrunk from a size 2 to a -2! BTW its a late War Links made jacket.
1938