BellyTank
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 7,061
Good stuff, HJ!
Is the "ventile liner" the "windshirt" of previous posts?
Could you describe it?
Let's see if the string vest, under your "shell" doesn't suck up the water like
a wick...
String T-shirt style undershirts- Swedish and Danish, are available here as surplus and are a great skin/under-layer. They are, of course, quite stretchable and conform to a range of sizes. I have worn mine beneath my Swedish Army woolen undershirt, which is of the non-itching variety,
by virtue of being knitted from fine, worsted yarns. (I have seen these being marketed on a specialist, outdoor website for the grand price of £60!)The string vest probably helps by keeping the wool off the skin. Very warm but not sweaty.
Actually, these Swedish woolen undershirts are very, very good-
plenty long, with a buttoning, cotton placquet, rib knit cuffs and thumb straps.
We await your next installment...
Re- the size of the Swedish Anoraks- I have 2, which seem like a useful size,
for a longer, looser Anorak but, as I mentioned, their relative cheapness
and generous size lends them well to becoming sewing machine fodder, if a smaller, shorter example is required. Enough cloth left over to make a hat, perhaps... I need to make one of them smaller,
more akin to the Cadet Smock size.
I guess, re: size/length of Anoraks, there are different requirements for a windproof shell-climbing activities, for example, could use a smaller, shorter, snugger variant and walking, or general cold weather, outdoor pursuits, could benefit from a larger/longer one, with more layering room and flexibility of use.
B
T
Is the "ventile liner" the "windshirt" of previous posts?
Could you describe it?
Let's see if the string vest, under your "shell" doesn't suck up the water like
a wick...
String T-shirt style undershirts- Swedish and Danish, are available here as surplus and are a great skin/under-layer. They are, of course, quite stretchable and conform to a range of sizes. I have worn mine beneath my Swedish Army woolen undershirt, which is of the non-itching variety,
by virtue of being knitted from fine, worsted yarns. (I have seen these being marketed on a specialist, outdoor website for the grand price of £60!)The string vest probably helps by keeping the wool off the skin. Very warm but not sweaty.
Actually, these Swedish woolen undershirts are very, very good-
plenty long, with a buttoning, cotton placquet, rib knit cuffs and thumb straps.
We await your next installment...
Re- the size of the Swedish Anoraks- I have 2, which seem like a useful size,
for a longer, looser Anorak but, as I mentioned, their relative cheapness
and generous size lends them well to becoming sewing machine fodder, if a smaller, shorter example is required. Enough cloth left over to make a hat, perhaps... I need to make one of them smaller,
more akin to the Cadet Smock size.
I guess, re: size/length of Anoraks, there are different requirements for a windproof shell-climbing activities, for example, could use a smaller, shorter, snugger variant and walking, or general cold weather, outdoor pursuits, could benefit from a larger/longer one, with more layering room and flexibility of use.
B
T