VintageEveryday
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 390
- Location
- Woodside, NY
No. It's a 44LGreat jacket, but wasn't that a size 42?
No. It's a 44LGreat jacket, but wasn't that a size 42?
the jacket from armpit to armpit was 22 inches according to the seller.
44 inches is the jacket measurement which isn't the same as the size:sport coats are generally designed with 2-4 inches of ease, making this one (by most standards) a 40-42. Hope it works out, anyway.[/QUO
Oh, you've seen the ebay listing?
this seller was dead wrong about the measurements of the sport coat I bought. He listed it as a size 44 in the title, while the measurements added up to a size 42, and it fits like a 38-40. The sleeve lining has twisted in on itself like a chinese finger trap, and the shoulders are sloping downward awkwardly (could be because it doesn't fit properly. I'm just very dissatisfied with this sport coat). I'm going to attempt to return it. I get, of course that the size and how it fits are two different things, but I know how vintage size suits fit me. The measurements add up to being smaller than a size 44, but this thing definitely fits MUCH smaller than that.Yes. I saw it too, IIRC it was 22 inches pit to pit but it might work for you.
I bought a mint 1930s overcoat from him.
That's what I tend to do. I guess I've been doing it without realizing. My main way to tell if something is true vintage is the thickness of the tweed, but mainly the smell. If it smells the way you'd expect old wool to smell, chances are it's over 60 years old. I know this sounds silly, but....I dunno. I know it when I smell itDating a coat would be hard to do just based on the look of a tweed, most of the time. Modern donegals still look like donegals, same with the Harris variety. The exception to this are tweeds that are all but extinct, but that were very common through the 40's. Fancy patterns in the weave, like diamonds, tend to suggest an older date, though these fancy tweeds did make a comeback in the sixties.
Worsted fabrics are easier. Generally, pre-fifties worsteds are heartier, have a rougher hand, and much more surface interest: subtle, complex stripes and checks. That being said, there are plenty of Golden Era suits in simple chalk stripes.
Better to take the fabric along with all the other available evidence - cut, button stance, shoulder expression, lining and lining material, etc. That is, unless you know something VERY specific about a particular fabric, and when it was in vogue.
rockin' the breaking bad look! That's a nice sport coat! Love the shoulder structure. How old would you say it is? 70s?Works for me, Michael!
I picked up this cashmere/lambs wool blend sport coat at the local Goodwill store. I need to lose 15-20 pounds but it's the best I could find for a funeral I was attending the next day.
That is a beauty of a jacket. Wow. Love that heavy twill.I found this coat about a year ago.