Edward said:In general, it does seem to me that people did wear much more brown in those days, with black less of the default option it tends to be now. We do have to bear in mind, though, that so many vintage jackets we see are surviving military wear which was by spec various shades of brown. Seems to me that perhaps this can skew the perception of colours available when it didn't necessarily reflect what was popular in civilian wear.
Edward said:I recall reading a review of a book called The Black Leather Jacket that explored these sorts of perceptions throughout the 20th century; book sounded great, though I can't remember the name of the author.
Milu said:The author was Mick Farren. There's also a documentary based on the book.
Atterbury Dodd said:Here is something I found interesting, although it doesn't really solve the black jacket mystery.
I was looking at a book with tons of pictures called American Theatre 100 Years, and I noticed quite soon after WWII, leather jackets started showing up in plays, being used by characters playing tough (often bad guys). To me it doesn't seem like leather jackets of any color were equated with bad characters much before the war, as most of the leather wearing thugs show up after the war in plays and movies. This would seem to indicate that something that happened during the war slowly changed peoples perception of not only the black jacket, but the leather jacket itself?
Just a thought.
Bourbon Guy said:From growing up in the 50's, my recollection is that guys still wearing their military issue jackets years after the war ended were thought of by our parents as either lacking ambition, or exhibiting an unwillingness or inability to move on with their lives. Everyone else was wearing civvies, getting a job, getting married, having kids, buying a house under the GI bill, and trying to make up for lost years. They were not tooting around the countryside on motorcycles and going on beer runs. Some guys came out screwed-up. You left them alone, but kept your kids away from them.
As for those who were buying cheap surplus jackets to wear, they hadn't earned the right to wear them and were fakers, a less detestible version of the ones who would turn up occasionally wearing medals they hadn't earned. Everyone hated them.
Bourbon Guy said:Edward-
Perhaps I didn't phrase it well. It was only the guys with the medals they didn't earn that were hated.
As for PTSD, I expect they were. If we only knew then.... but we didn't. No one knew how to treat it, and we didn't have the medications then that we have now. So I think a lot of guys self-medicated with alcohol.
sensed a change in attitude that coincided with the war and I was just describing what I recall my parents' attitudes were a half a century ago. Don't get bummed about it. Wear your jacket.
Consider this typical around here. At the Lounge you get an answer to the question you ask and those you have not yet thought of.rjbaal said:Some thread. All I did was ask what was more popular brown or black