I apologize in advance if something like this has been discussed in detail but I thought it might help newer members like myself when purchasing a jacket online.
Pit to pit can be so difficult to judge. Nobody really mentions this but P2P will vary depending on where the arm pit seam lies due to shoulder drop and torso to sleeve opening. Arm sythe?
Depending on how high the arm holes are can change the chest circumference dramatically, that’s why so many big guys on here can get away with 22” P2P because some jackets have large arm opening or wide shoulders causing the actual pit seam to fall far below the actual largest circumference of the chest.
The only way I can think to do this is to figure where the shoulder seam will land and then measuring from where the pit should land on your body from a particular jacket rather than just the widest part of your chest.
you veterans surely have thought of this but I don’t see it mentioned on any manufacturer sites.
The Kensington I had was 24” pit to pit and I had probably a 47” chest at the time, but due to how large the arm hole was the actual pit fell far below my pectoral muscles.
This can certainly help when custom ordering or ordering a vintage jacket which seem to have larger arm holes, I realize now that i don’t need a size 48 in vintage and probably could get away with a 46 or even a 44 in some cases.
Pit to pit can be so difficult to judge. Nobody really mentions this but P2P will vary depending on where the arm pit seam lies due to shoulder drop and torso to sleeve opening. Arm sythe?
Depending on how high the arm holes are can change the chest circumference dramatically, that’s why so many big guys on here can get away with 22” P2P because some jackets have large arm opening or wide shoulders causing the actual pit seam to fall far below the actual largest circumference of the chest.
The only way I can think to do this is to figure where the shoulder seam will land and then measuring from where the pit should land on your body from a particular jacket rather than just the widest part of your chest.
you veterans surely have thought of this but I don’t see it mentioned on any manufacturer sites.
The Kensington I had was 24” pit to pit and I had probably a 47” chest at the time, but due to how large the arm hole was the actual pit fell far below my pectoral muscles.
This can certainly help when custom ordering or ordering a vintage jacket which seem to have larger arm holes, I realize now that i don’t need a size 48 in vintage and probably could get away with a 46 or even a 44 in some cases.