nobody in the factory have the gumption to pick up a camera and take a new pic of the jacket?
the Clayton looks very nice! great call on picking that hideReviving this old thread to shine some spot light on the Clayton tannery, centuries old tannery in UK which I thought was gone but I guess not yet.
I have the same jacket in all three different leather, Clayton Horsehide (1.2mm), Horween Lux Horsehide (1.6 to 1.8mm), and (corrected grained) Kokkolan Elg (1.6mm). The Clayton Horse measures at only 3oz thick, but is as heavy as my 4oz Elg, and only half pound lighter than my monster Horween Lux horse. The weight is 6.5, 6.5, and 7 lbs respectively.
I first saw the Clayton Horsehide here from 58Panhead's SB jacket and I was hooked. His experience here:
https://www.thefedoralounge.com/thr...-veg-tan-vintage-brown-hh-harris-tweed.97252/
To be fair, this is not a leather for comfort wearing. In fact it's so hard for me I couldn't do fit pics, yet. But the leather is so different this jacket ain't going anywhere. I am soaking this thing in moisturizer and try to make it softer. Best to get zippers not buttons when using this leather.
I waited a long time for SB to restock on the Clayton leather. I will leave the maker out of the leather experience because this is all about Clayton. My theory is that Clayton cuts the horsehide differently than everybody else. They do it "sides" like how Horween does their Cows, instead of the Front Quarters. This gives their horse sides a lot of the middle / butt strip part which has a woven leather structure than the normal standing up fibers found in the fronts. Hence the super heavy weight even at thinner thickness. The Clayton horsehide will literally survive a nuclear blast. Ok I am exaggerating here but you get the picture.
The Clayton is hanging on the right, the elg is on the left:
View attachment 372845
This the Horween Lux Horse about 4.5 oz. Very thick stuff. The other Lux leather I've got were thinner about 4 oz or less, but the cognac color one was odd in thickness.
View attachment 372846
In conclusion: Clayton Horsehide is very, very unique. I hope the tannery is doing well now.
The Clayton horsehide will literally survive a nuclear blast.
Thanks for this educational post. I have a Clayton Leather Cafe Racer from Simmonsbilt. The leather is thick and tough. Tough like Lost World's leather but far more pliable and soft. I conditioned mine with Huberds Shoe Grease generously,Reviving this old thread to shine some spot light on the Clayton tannery, centuries old tannery in UK which I thought was gone but I guess not yet.
I have the same jacket in all three different leather, Clayton Horsehide (1.2mm), Horween Lux Horsehide (1.6 to 1.8mm), and (corrected grained) Kokkolan Elg (1.6mm). The Clayton Horse measures at only 3oz thick, but is as heavy as my 4oz Elg, and only half pound lighter than my monster Horween Lux horse. The weight is 6.5, 6.5, and 7 lbs respectively.
I first saw the Clayton Horsehide here from 58Panhead's SB jacket and I was hooked. His experience here:
https://www.thefedoralounge.com/thr...-veg-tan-vintage-brown-hh-harris-tweed.97252/
To be fair, this is not a leather for comfort wearing. In fact it's so hard for me I couldn't do fit pics, yet. But the leather is so different this jacket ain't going anywhere. I am soaking this thing in moisturizer and try to make it softer. Best to get zippers not buttons when using this leather.
I waited a long time for SB to restock on the Clayton leather. I will leave the maker out of the leather experience because this is all about Clayton. My theory is that Clayton cuts the horsehide differently than everybody else. They do it "sides" like how Horween does their Cows, instead of the Front Quarters. This gives their horse sides a lot of the middle / butt strip part which has a woven leather structure than the normal standing up fibers found in the fronts. Hence the super heavy weight even at thinner thickness. The Clayton horsehide will literally survive a nuclear blast. Ok I am exaggerating here but you get the picture.
The Clayton is hanging on the right, the elg is on the left:
View attachment 372845
This the Horween Lux Horse about 4.5 oz. Very thick stuff. The other Lux leather I've got were thinner about 4 oz or less, but the cognac color one was odd in thickness.
View attachment 372846
In conclusion: Clayton Horsehide is very, very unique. I hope the tannery is doing well now.
My understanding is that the company went out of business.^^^That's very nice. Leather and Riri.
I have not seen a Clayton leather jacket listed in the Classifieds. There were Shinki's, Horweens, Italian Veggies, but no Claytons.
For now the only robust HH available are either Horween's CXL FQHH or LW's heavyweight HH. All good stuff. Just from different locations.