Are we ignoring the obvious reason, which is cost savings?
To preface, yes I know many people find beauty in the uneven grains. But, if it wasn't for cost saving reasons, what is stopping jacket makers from offering smooth-only, uneven-only, and mixed versions, at least for the best-selling jacket silhouettes? Jacket makers can add an extra step of lightly tumble the leather before cutting the pattern to mimic actual usage and reveals the grains underneath. They just choose not to.
I attached 2 pics of uneven grains on two jackets but here's another example of the Real McCoy's Buco J100:
Smooth : https://buyee.jp/mercari/item/m76424896468
Uneven grain front panels : https://buyee.jp/item/yahoo/auction/l1065287123?
Is it because we, Western buyers, have always hold Japanese craftmanship to the highest level of respect and as such any evidence that might contradict otherwise gets rationale'd as either 1.the nature of the leather or 2.Japanese culture of embracing imperfection?
Or, perhaps it's the same phenomenon we see in Western clothing brands. First they would start with really high quality clothing at high-but-not-hyped price. They build a reputation for high quality at high price over a few years before they cash in their brand equity by cutting QC steps, reduce warranty, use less quality material, etc... while keeping the high price and capture an even fatter margins. Examples would be like Arc'teryx, Billy Reid, Todd Snyder, etc...
To preface, yes I know many people find beauty in the uneven grains. But, if it wasn't for cost saving reasons, what is stopping jacket makers from offering smooth-only, uneven-only, and mixed versions, at least for the best-selling jacket silhouettes? Jacket makers can add an extra step of lightly tumble the leather before cutting the pattern to mimic actual usage and reveals the grains underneath. They just choose not to.
I attached 2 pics of uneven grains on two jackets but here's another example of the Real McCoy's Buco J100:
Smooth : https://buyee.jp/mercari/item/m76424896468
Uneven grain front panels : https://buyee.jp/item/yahoo/auction/l1065287123?
Is it because we, Western buyers, have always hold Japanese craftmanship to the highest level of respect and as such any evidence that might contradict otherwise gets rationale'd as either 1.the nature of the leather or 2.Japanese culture of embracing imperfection?
Or, perhaps it's the same phenomenon we see in Western clothing brands. First they would start with really high quality clothing at high-but-not-hyped price. They build a reputation for high quality at high price over a few years before they cash in their brand equity by cutting QC steps, reduce warranty, use less quality material, etc... while keeping the high price and capture an even fatter margins. Examples would be like Arc'teryx, Billy Reid, Todd Snyder, etc...