sounded like a generic leather jacket scam, surprising they still do that exact same act since it was already captured with cam in youtube and perhaps shown on TV.I think this article is in support of fashion forward merchandising. Very different market. I had a strange experience last summer. I was in my little town just east of San Francisco, had ridden a motorcycle over to the bank and was dismounting. As I was removing ear plugs and unzipping a Johnsons Leather jacket, I hear someone calling to me. Parked nearby was a huge, brand new, Mercedes SUV. A young guy, in broken English, wanted to talk leather jackets. He said he was a fashion designer and had flown in from Italy for a fashion show in San Francisco and wanted me to see his samples and wanted to know what I thought. He had about a dozen jackets in the back seat, all wrapped nicely. He insisted I inspect the quality of the stitch, the contrasting color of the thread, the softness of the leather, the design of the cut, the hang of the drape, etc. He told me the brands that his jackets would sell under (I didn't recognize nor do I remember any of them) and what the street cost would be. He cited well over $1K and even $2K. I didn't have the heart to tell him that they would tear like paper in a get-off. I wasn't exactly sure where he was going with the conversation because of the language difficulty, but he was heading back to SFO and I had some banking that needed to get done. For some reason, though, he wanted to give me a blue leather jacket that felt more like pajamas than a leather jacket. If his story was all true, I figured he just didn't want to carry them back through customs. Regardless, I declined. I had no use for it and who knows what his true story could have been. If he had just robbed a truck in Oakland, I wasn't interested. What he was showing me, though, could not have been more different from what I was wearing. Those jackets were nice, I suppose, but more for a millennial going clubbing on a Saturday night, which is not my thing.
What this article told me was I can get an infinitely better designed and constructed jacket made with infinitely better leather for significantly less by avoiding mainstream brands....thanks GQ
If anyone is looking to Schott Perfecto jackets for the broad-shoulder, narrow-waist look then one look at their measurements numbers should end that dream.
Seems like the only people wearing cross zip MC style jackets anymore besides real bikers, are women. Women wearing really awful and cheap looking versions of this style in every possible variation is a fad that I'm surprised hasn't burned out yet
I'm hoping they'll leave cafe racer jackets off the pages for a while.
I think this article is in support of fashion forward merchandising. Very different market. I had a strange experience last summer. I was in my little town just east of San Francisco, had ridden a motorcycle over to the bank and was dismounting. As I was removing ear plugs and unzipping a Johnsons Leather jacket, I hear someone calling to me. Parked nearby was a huge, brand new, Mercedes SUV. A young guy, in broken English, wanted to talk leather jackets. He said he was a fashion designer and had flown in from Italy for a fashion show in San Francisco and wanted me to see his samples and wanted to know what I thought. He had about a dozen jackets in the back seat, all wrapped nicely. He insisted I inspect the quality of the stitch, the contrasting color of the thread, the softness of the leather, the design of the cut, the hang of the drape, etc. He told me the brands that his jackets would sell under (I didn't recognize nor do I remember any of them) and what the street cost would be. He cited well over $1K and even $2K. I didn't have the heart to tell him that they would tear like paper in a get-off. I wasn't exactly sure where he was going with the conversation because of the language difficulty, but he was heading back to SFO and I had some banking that needed to get done. For some reason, though, he wanted to give me a blue leather jacket that felt more like pajamas than a leather jacket. If his story was all true, I figured he just didn't want to carry them back through customs. Regardless, I declined. I had no use for it and who knows what his true story could have been. If he had just robbed a truck in Oakland, I wasn't interested. What he was showing me, though, could not have been more different from what I was wearing. Those jackets were nice, I suppose, but more for a millennial going clubbing on a Saturday night, which is not my thing.
It's amazing how a lot of those jackets are just a variation on the Perfecto which, although not to my taste, many people here like and respect. The main difference is the expectation of someone seriously using that GQ article to buy a leather jacket. Their expectation is to follow through the link to a beautifully presented fashion website. It's the presentation of the website and the contexts of the jackets that disqualify the companies people on this site know well (contexts meaning presented as reproduction rather than jackets to be taken at face value).
The presentation of many of the websites for companies known here is generally pretty bad. Confusing layouts, thumbnail images of jackets and all steeped in historical accuracy. Some of the Japanese sites are better but you can't really link someone to a Japanese site from GQ. Himel has a very nice site which, dates in parentheses aside, fits the bill but unfortunately custom made rules it out (crazy given the reasonable prices relative to many of the jackets on that list). The closest cross over there is in my opinion is The Real McCoys, but not being a US site I think doesn't help it's case (the site references import fees in a banner on the majority of the pages).
I saw somebody wearing a Perfecto knock-off when I was driving home last night. The cut was way off and leather too soft. How did I know? It was too large and draped into a bell shape.
I very rarely see good leather jackets being worn.
I very rarely see good leather jackets being worn.