majormajor
One Too Many
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- 1,713
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- UK
Leonardo Da Vinci was, in my book, a pretty cool guy. He is still acknowledged to be probably the single most talented person who has ever lived.
He drew Vitruvian Man in 1490, to illustrate the elegance of the proportions of the human body. Back in the late 60's, I spent many an hour, whilst at Art College, studying the beautiful symmetry of this drawing (life classes every Monday morning - what a way to get over the weekend! :eeek.
So what has this got to do with FL Outerwear?
Well, there has been much debate recently above the positioning of HalfBelts on jackets, and references and opinions from a few quarters regarding the position of the "natural waist".
If you look at the picture, hopefully you can see where the natural waist actually is (the arrows might help ). Obviously, Vitruvian man didn't drink much beer, or eat too many hamburgers, so his torso is pretty well defined.
I have seen posts on here that infer that the "natural waist" is somewhere below the navel. This is not the case. The narrowest point is actually above the navel. Truly "high-waisted" trousers can go right up to there if desired, - and THAT is the correct place for a halfbelt. ON THE NATURAL WAIST.
If you want the halfbelt to actually function as it was intended - i.e to pull the garment in at the narrowest part of the torso, then that is where it needs to be.
OK, Vitruvian Man didn't ride a M/C, so I guess you are gonna have to compromise the design of your jacket in order to give you protection when riding. That's cool, if that's what you need. And you will see deviations on a few old jackets. But that is what they are - deviations from the norm. Or maybe just badly tailored ones that didn't ever fit properly.
But that is NOT gonna move your "natural waist" to somewhere below the navel. As Leo demonstrated. It is simply not there.
I hope that helps
He drew Vitruvian Man in 1490, to illustrate the elegance of the proportions of the human body. Back in the late 60's, I spent many an hour, whilst at Art College, studying the beautiful symmetry of this drawing (life classes every Monday morning - what a way to get over the weekend! :eeek.
So what has this got to do with FL Outerwear?
Well, there has been much debate recently above the positioning of HalfBelts on jackets, and references and opinions from a few quarters regarding the position of the "natural waist".
If you look at the picture, hopefully you can see where the natural waist actually is (the arrows might help ). Obviously, Vitruvian man didn't drink much beer, or eat too many hamburgers, so his torso is pretty well defined.
I have seen posts on here that infer that the "natural waist" is somewhere below the navel. This is not the case. The narrowest point is actually above the navel. Truly "high-waisted" trousers can go right up to there if desired, - and THAT is the correct place for a halfbelt. ON THE NATURAL WAIST.
If you want the halfbelt to actually function as it was intended - i.e to pull the garment in at the narrowest part of the torso, then that is where it needs to be.
OK, Vitruvian Man didn't ride a M/C, so I guess you are gonna have to compromise the design of your jacket in order to give you protection when riding. That's cool, if that's what you need. And you will see deviations on a few old jackets. But that is what they are - deviations from the norm. Or maybe just badly tailored ones that didn't ever fit properly.
But that is NOT gonna move your "natural waist" to somewhere below the navel. As Leo demonstrated. It is simply not there.
I hope that helps
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