DavidJones
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 177
- Location
- Ohio
Interesting Thanks for posting.
Indigo Eagle, thanks for that link. I'm really liking these boots.
http://www.phaeton-co.com/?pid=52849358
Yeah, IE, I really like the two tone pecos. The OJs not so much.
I'm still looking for the perfect roper / pecos boot. I'd like something like these, but with square toe, thinner soles and a cuban heel.
http://item.rakuten.co.jp/mavazi/riosofmercedes_010?s-id=top_normal_browsehist
I really some of those upper colour combinations, the turquoise, gold and black is particularly lovely. However, I'm not sure I could get away with them anywhere in Glasgow other than at its version of The Grand Ole Opry (it really does exist).
Of course you could ... I once saw a guy in full "Roy Rogers" get up in the Cart Bar in Pollok ...... he seemed oblivious to the fact that he was rather ... unique
I have a couple of Scully shirts ( ostentatiously western) that I wear regularly out ..... you'd fit right in with the Rockabilly crown Soanie
It is not just the Japanese. Take a look at Rising Sun repro of Neustadter Brothers and A.B. ELFELT & Co. The former costs Euro 500. There is also the Mr Freedom. As for the prices, in addition to paying for the workmanship, you are paying for the quality control. The cost of the rejects are factored into the prices. Workwear in the old days is not subjected to the QC they have now. Take for example, the Japanese makers will not likely tolerate any un-matched hide on any of their A-2 repros while this lack of QC is said to be more authentic and genuine for the war era. Salesperson at Real McCoy Tokyo went over the Buco J-22 my friend bought inch by inch to make sure there is not a single defect before they let my friend leave with the good. You see all those rejects on Aero sales page, you have to wonder what happened to the Japanese makers' rejects or even LVC's for that matter since its half-belt in the 2003 collection was made by Aero.But that, my friend, is the nub of the issue. Yes they were produced in the US, and yes, they were selfedge. But the very LAST thing they were was "high end". They were "workwear", sold at workwear prices. The idea that workwear could ever be high end was, in the 60's, laughable.
Nowadays, folks who weren't around back then have bought the lie, completely. Jeans are either "vintage" or "designer" - and if they are cheap, they must be crap.
Yes, the Japanese market is, in relative terms, big. But, whichever way you look at it, the rest of the World is a bigger market. But the Japanese manufacturers ignore it. Maybe the rest of the world is less gullible??