CLShaeffer
New in Town
- Messages
- 39
- Location
- Hawaii
First post. I was certain my first post would have been in the Adventure Gear or one of the Safari Jacket threads... but this came up first.
http://www.jcrew.com/AST/Browse/Men...egory/outerwear/cotton/PRDOVR~96051/96051.jsp
Anyone heard about this jacket? I'm ~thinking~ of replacing a very world weary 60's Belstaff Trailmaster with one. For motorcycle riding here in Hawaii. I know the oilcloth is too thick for general wear here in the tropics but I've found it to be the best material for the hot-sun-to-heavy-rain-and-back-to-hot-sun riding that one gets used to here.
The oilcloth breathes better than modern cordura riding jackets and is more water resistant. Tough as nails, too, though I'm not specifically familiar with the Millerain cloth. And looks WAY better. Then I get to wear it when I travel to the mainland.
What's the scoop on J. Crew's general durability these days? Is this likely to be more a fashion jacket or a fairly functional item?
And if anyone has first hand experience with either this very jacket or Millerain cloth in general, I'm curious how heavy it is. I'm looking for what passes for light- to mid-weight for an oilcloth garment. I'd call the vintage trailmaster a mid to heavy jacket- partly because of its stout cotton lining.
I hate to think about giving up on the vintage Belstaff, but it really has seen its day. A few holes, age stressed seams and a dead zipper... 10 minutes of a good rain at 50mph and I'm wet. I've done my best to restore it short of replacing the zipper and at this point it basically works well enough for me to want a newer jacket of similar cloth. Its a good compromise for riding in quickly changing tropical conditions.
Thanks. Aloha,
Chris
http://www.jcrew.com/AST/Browse/Men...egory/outerwear/cotton/PRDOVR~96051/96051.jsp
Anyone heard about this jacket? I'm ~thinking~ of replacing a very world weary 60's Belstaff Trailmaster with one. For motorcycle riding here in Hawaii. I know the oilcloth is too thick for general wear here in the tropics but I've found it to be the best material for the hot-sun-to-heavy-rain-and-back-to-hot-sun riding that one gets used to here.
The oilcloth breathes better than modern cordura riding jackets and is more water resistant. Tough as nails, too, though I'm not specifically familiar with the Millerain cloth. And looks WAY better. Then I get to wear it when I travel to the mainland.
What's the scoop on J. Crew's general durability these days? Is this likely to be more a fashion jacket or a fairly functional item?
And if anyone has first hand experience with either this very jacket or Millerain cloth in general, I'm curious how heavy it is. I'm looking for what passes for light- to mid-weight for an oilcloth garment. I'd call the vintage trailmaster a mid to heavy jacket- partly because of its stout cotton lining.
I hate to think about giving up on the vintage Belstaff, but it really has seen its day. A few holes, age stressed seams and a dead zipper... 10 minutes of a good rain at 50mph and I'm wet. I've done my best to restore it short of replacing the zipper and at this point it basically works well enough for me to want a newer jacket of similar cloth. Its a good compromise for riding in quickly changing tropical conditions.
Thanks. Aloha,
Chris