subject101
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 223
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- Mennoniteborough
In sense that, throughout its history, the Russian Communist Party used clothing to help present a unified front and chose modes of dress designed to communicate power, prowess and scariness, I would say they definitely had very official "semi-official" uniforms (checkout Stalin: The Court of The Red Czar by Simon Montefiore, he spends a significant amount of time discussing how members of the Bolshevik elite dressed, ate, and lived as part of his analysis of its nuanced cliquishness inherent in its power structure).
Communist leaders started to wear leather jackets because they thought leather had any kind of psychological impact over population. Himmler liked and copied the idea several years later.
However, these kind of jackets were never part of any uniform. They were civilian clothes.
Germany suffered a leather shortage since almost 1936 and in the soviet Russia, a leather jacket was a luxury item. Some officers were allowed to purchase one or were given one but they were quite less common than we think after being badly affected by movies.
Just try to find a picture of a real NKVD member with a leather coat. They existed but you're going to find first pictures of civilians, journalists and war correspondants with these jackets.