- Messages
- 15,563
- Location
- East Central Indiana
Acme or Aero? Why does the listing say Acme in the banner but Aero in the text? Strategic typo?
Well..it is a repro of an original Aero that GW prefers to call an Acme in this stock form.
HD
Acme or Aero? Why does the listing say Acme in the banner but Aero in the text? Strategic typo?
Acme or Aero? Why does the listing say Acme in the banner but Aero in the text? Strategic typo?
I believe that this is along the same lines as the GW Combat Clone offering, which I recently acquired this Rough Wear 1401...and LOVE it. The hide is insane...so much character in the leather and a really great look & feel.
/QUOTE]
It appears to be the same type of process, and probably call it Combat Crew to differentiate the GW from the Diamond Dave production. Your jacket looks stunning, perfect fit.
They do explain in the text that they brand it Acme to avoid confusion with Aero.
GW has already rebranded its ACME jackets to AERO on its website. The GW/DD colaboration appears to be a seperate entity and not covered by the licence agreement with Aero.
....... As far as Aero suing John's butt...JC took into consideration the ownership of the Aero name from the very beginning. I remember him researching and more than willing to do the right thing when he started making Aero lookalike repros. That just seems to be JC's DNA. However...not so with some others.
HD
Everyone wants to sue everyone to claim they came up with the idea. When in reality the human body can only influence a finite number of patterns based on two arms and one upper torso. Everyone is just tweaking patterns from old historical jackets and adding a 1/4 inch here or there and calling it vintage fit. You pay your $$$ where you wish and take your chance. It's all the same game
Everyone wants to sue everyone to claim they came up with the idea. When in reality the human body can only influence a finite number of patterns based on two arms and one upper torso. Everyone is just tweaking patterns from old historical jackets and adding a 1/4 inch here or there and calling it vintage fit. You pay your $$$ where you wish and take your chance. It's all the same game
In this case they are talking not about patterns but about the use of a name. Aero licenses their name out to other companies.
Actually, for assorted reasons, I rather like the Acme trademark.