Jovan
Suspended
- Messages
- 4,095
- Location
- Gainesville, Florida
What?Peacoat said:Jovan, looks like a size 38?
What?Peacoat said:Jovan, looks like a size 38?
Jovan said:What?
Marc Chevalier said:Here's the strangest WWII-era peacoat I've ever come across. The cloth is very fuzzy, sort of like steel wool. I've never seen anything like it.
Strange indeed. Do you have a picture of the label? Could be that over time, and with improper cleaning methods, the wool degraded to the finish that you observed. The stencil on the inside of the coat certainly seems to be in very good shape, however. Though the information stenciled on the coat is not the standard name and service number. Also, I noted that the inside lining is not the shiny rayon type nylon seen in peacoats prior to 1980, but is more of heavy cotton fabric.
We probably won't solve this riddle anytime soon!
Peacoat said:Strange indeed. Do you have a picture of the label?
Dakota said:Could be that over time, and with improper cleaning methods, the wool degraded to the finish that you observed.
wetmarble said:My other theory is that it could be a cold weather peacoat.
Marc Chevalier said:Bet you're right. The address stenciled on the lining says, "Great Lakes, Illinois." It doesn't get colder and windier than that!
.
green papaya said:maybe it was a private purchase pea coat that a sailor bought himself?
could be commercially made, and bought at a surplus store
I believe it is vintage because it has the person's name stenciled on the inside plus an ID number that is only 7 digits long meaning it is his service number. [The Army and Air Force replaced service numbers with Social Security Numbers in 1969. The Navy and Marine Corps followed suit in 1972.] Social security numbers were stenciled in after 1972.