Picked this up at Goodwill last night for $10 while looking for some ties. Took these quick pictures this morning. It looks flawless. I will try to get a front and back shot in a few days.
You know, for the longest time, I hated tweed. Couldn't stand it. Then I actually started realizing its merits for cold winters, and now it's grown on me.
hey,
im a recent discoverer of all things tweed and searching ebay for a cheap entry into having my very first tweed sport jacket but have a question...
it seems the majority of tweed jackets are single vented and after reading the debates between single vs dual vents i feel sorta inclined to be more patient for a side vent version to pop up.
should i get a cheaper more available single vent jacket to get me started?
and if i do end up with a center vent jacket, would stitching up a harris tweed type jacket center vent take away its originality?
my main concern is that i do have a extra wide behind/hips.
Seller claimed these were 1980's does 1950's, but it looks more 1960's does 1920's to me, but I've been searching far and wide for heavy weight herringbone slacks and for $14 bucks these fit the bill regardless of age.
1940's tweed Hollywood waist slacks.
Small WPL number had me at firstthinking these are early '40s slacks, but with the war going on where would tailors have gotten wool imported from? Unless possibly these are early postwar slacks.
Material matches a flat cap I have from around the same era. Origional button close looks like it was replaced with the modern metal clasp sometime after the 1950's.
Here's an unusual one. I think it's the first time I've handled a Harris Tweed jacket with peaked lapels. It was made by CWS (Cooperative Wholesale Society):
I tried to get a close up to show the colour, but it wasn't very successful. It's actually much greener than this suggests.
What date would you think for this jacket? I don't have much of a knowledge of Harris labels but thought this style was circa 1950s, although the peaked lapels wouldn't fit with that period. The angle of the cutaway on the jacket also made me think it could be earlier, and the CWS label looks forties (but again, I'm not really familiar with their labels).
nice jacket TT. i'd go for a safe bet of mid-late 40s. the cutaway is reminiscent of some early 20s Brit jackets, but nothing else about the jacket suggests that date, so i think it's something of an anomaly.
(i have a Selfridges jacket of near identical fabric, but i prefer yours as it's got peaked lapels).
Curious cutaway and sharp corner on the fronts of that harris tweed. It looks very much like what I have seen in drafts from around 1920, although I agree with hbk's dating.
"Made from 100% Pure Wool" on the label suggests late 40s at earliest. The earlier ones, including the one on VFG, lacked this wool content statement. Along with that particular CWS Society wear label, I would certainly plump for an early 50s date on it.
Why would peak lapels not be right for a 50s date?
They were around. Maybe less popular - one of the reasons my grandad hated his demob suit (w/ peak lapels incidentally) was 'cause it looked like a pre-war suit. This could have been a contrbuting factor, I guess - but still an option. I've see a few over the years.
That said, I have never seen a Harris Tweed jacket with peak lapels. And I've never seen peak lapels quite like those! They remind me mostly of the lapels on your Bookster suits …
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