Fletch
I'll Lock Up
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After having a leisurely spin thru the photo gallery at the Vintage Leather Jacket forum, I think I understand better what gents mean when they speak of the quality of fit – call it "trim", "classic," "military," or that much used and abused term "authentic" – they look for in the Type A-2 flight jacket.
This is a quality much desired but seldom defined. It does not necessarily mean a jacket that fits you like a sausage casing, with not a ripple or buckle anywhere (unless that is what you want, of course). It comes down to 2 key things:
1. The shoulders better be close to your natural shoulder width, or at best no more than 1" too big on either side. If it makes you look round-shouldered, it's a dead giveaway for that "sloppy," "modern," "outerwear" fit everybody grumbles about.
2. The upper sleeves better not be drastically wider than the lower sleeves. They have to look like suit or shirt sleeves. If they look like pastry nozzles or down parka sleeves, once again: dead giveaway.
Aircrewmen back in the day who traded and finagled for their scarce A-2s might have any old fit from scrawny-snug to hanging off 'em in shrouds – but almost always both 1. and 2. applied. So these, I think, must be the absolute deal breakers for a classic fit.
And another thing, fellas. Go ahead and unfasten those collar snaps. No one did it then and you'll be more comfortable.
This is a quality much desired but seldom defined. It does not necessarily mean a jacket that fits you like a sausage casing, with not a ripple or buckle anywhere (unless that is what you want, of course). It comes down to 2 key things:
1. The shoulders better be close to your natural shoulder width, or at best no more than 1" too big on either side. If it makes you look round-shouldered, it's a dead giveaway for that "sloppy," "modern," "outerwear" fit everybody grumbles about.
2. The upper sleeves better not be drastically wider than the lower sleeves. They have to look like suit or shirt sleeves. If they look like pastry nozzles or down parka sleeves, once again: dead giveaway.
Aircrewmen back in the day who traded and finagled for their scarce A-2s might have any old fit from scrawny-snug to hanging off 'em in shrouds – but almost always both 1. and 2. applied. So these, I think, must be the absolute deal breakers for a classic fit.
And another thing, fellas. Go ahead and unfasten those collar snaps. No one did it then and you'll be more comfortable.