Andrew Middleton
New in Town
- Messages
- 21
After much deliberation, and an endless series of email correspondence with Thurston Brothers, I took the plunge and ordered a board racer from TB/Aero. Carrie was kind enough to post the size 38 fit jacket to the wilds of Tennessee, and I impatiently awaited its arrival.
Pics are shown below. In the first 2, the jacket was zipped; in the second set of 2, the jacket was unzipped.
My general reflections on the fit jacket were as follows, and in no particular order...
Vicenza leather was SO pebbly that I was taken aback. CXL was
my favorite (either HH or steer) but was advised against it in this
pattern (too stiff for first jacket)
Sleeves were roughly 1” too short (I do not ride MC)
Chest felt SO much tighter than it appears in pics!
I want to be able to layer a collared shirt and light merino wool
sweater, so moved up to 40 in final order
I can’t pull off zips on top of the sleeves...gotta move those to the
back!
Also can’t pull off the board racer look...decided to make it a
Seven (August collar, 1 horizontal chest pocket, handwarmers w/
zip closure (down in closed position)
Now here is where I most need your help!! My final reflection was that the jacket was too short. The fit jacket was listed as having a back length of 24.75”. When ordering with TB(Carrie), I kept increasing this number until I settled on 26.5”
Did I go too far in increasing the length?
I am hoping to end up with a length and fit similar to ProteinNerd and Mowgli. Saw pics of those 2 gents in their jackets (Sheene, I think...) and they look fantastic! I certainly don’t have the athletic physique of ProteinNerd, nor the tall and lean silhouette of Mowgli, but hope to get close!
Any other thoughts on overall fit or styling? I’ve only a 4-5” drop from chest to waist, so Carrie warned me against the Cafe Racer or Sheene and this seems sound advice to me
Thanks for reading, if you made it this far.
And thanks too for the knowledge you guys share with visitors and other forum members.
Your kindness and civility speak volumes to the character of the collective group.
-Andrew