Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Peacoat

*
Bartender
Messages
6,454
Location
South of Nashville
Thank you for finding the answer. That means a lot to me. It is also very interesting to learn more about how these jackets are used. I always wondered why so many of these jackets have survived in such good condition. Knowing they were not used for ship work makes a lot of sense. I wonder if that also explains why most peacoats do not have rank patches on them. My father was in the Navy Reserves in the early 60's. As a young boy, I distinctly remember his uniform stored in a box in the attic. He recently passed and I will lay him to rest this spring.
I'm sorry for your loss.

Many sailors were never stationed in a cold climate, and didn't wear their coats much, if all. So never had their rank sewed on. That's another reason they are in such good shape–never worn.
 

Dudley

Familiar Face
Messages
91
Is that the 38 you bought before that I saw pop back up?
Yes. This is the jacket I returned because it was auctioned as a 38, and the tag clearly said 36. Looks like the auction title is a little schizophrenic saying both 38 and 36. This jacket is a 9 in terms of condition. All the buttons need resewing, but the fabric, labels are pristine. I hated to send it back. The seller is good too, he admitted the mistake and accepted an easy return
 

trentstanton

Familiar Face
Messages
72
Yes. This is the jacket I returned because it was auctioned as a 38, and the tag clearly said 36. Looks like the auction title is a little schizophrenic saying both 38 and 36. This jacket is a 9 in terms of condition. All the buttons need resewing, but the fabric, labels are pristine. I hated to send it back. The seller is good too, he admitted the mistake and accepted an easy return
This appears to be the same coat @spotmark bought last week? I'm confused. I looked at recently sold and looks like it sold for 17 the previous week. It was relisted with same pics.
 

Dudley

Familiar Face
Messages
91

Dudley

Familiar Face
Messages
91
Difference between a WWI button left, and WWII and beyond button right. 1 3/8" versus 1 1/4". Sizable difference. The buttons must be very prominent on a WW I jacket.

Next step, polish up the rubber WWI's and see if I can bring back the shine.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_1294.jpeg
    IMG_1294.jpeg
    4.2 MB · Views: 90

Peacoat

*
Bartender
Messages
6,454
Location
South of Nashville
Difference between a WWI button left, and WWII and beyond button right. 1 3/8" versus 1 1/4". Sizable difference. The buttons must be very prominent on a WW I jacket.

Next step, polish up the rubber WWI's and see if I can bring back the shine.
Not to be pedantic * but these "rubber" buttons are actually Bakelite buttons. Introduced in the 1920s, they were the first completely synthetic plastic buttons.
_____
* But after studying these coats for well over 20 years, I just can't help myself
 

Dudley

Familiar Face
Messages
91
Not to be pedantic * but these "rubber" buttons are actually Bakelite buttons. Introduced in the 1920s, they were the first completely synthetic plastic buttons.
_____
* But after studying these coats for well over 20 years, I just can't help myself
Very interesting. The back of button reads AHR Co. HP. Bakelite is hard and non flexible making it fragile. I wonder if that is why the few WW I jackets I have seen have replacement buttons? Folks selling these buttons still refer to them as rubber for some reason.
 

Peacoat

*
Bartender
Messages
6,454
Location
South of Nashville
Very interesting. The back of button reads AHR Co. HP. Bakelite is hard and non flexible making it fragile. I wonder if that is why the few WW I jackets I have seen have replacement buttons? Folks selling these buttons still refer to them as rubber for some reason.
Rubber has been around much longer than Bakelite which didn't see use until the 1920s–don't remember the exact year. So, the early buttons could well have been rubber.

I found my WWI type buttons (stars around the perimeter of the button) and none of them have the letters "AHR Co. HP." They are all the hard Bakelite buttons.

Do your buttons feel like rubber, or the harder Bakelite?
 

trentstanton

Familiar Face
Messages
72
This is a bit sketchy. Someone just won this coat in bid for $26, maybe even from here and the same seller listed it again for $400 lol. Didn't someone here but this?
Screenshot_20230314-200920~2.png
 

jms09

New in Town
Messages
18
This is a bit sketchy. Someone just won this coat in bid for $26, maybe even from here and the same seller listed it again for $400 lol. Didn't someone here but this?
View attachment 498059
This is indeed strange. I literally bought this from the exact same seller for $68. It was in great condition, but it was just a tad too big for my preferences. I thought the older 6-button coats might fit closer to the WWII versions, but they’re pretty consistent with the 60’s Kersey coats.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,246
Messages
3,077,140
Members
54,183
Latest member
UrbanGraveDave
Top