Others have mentioned that men in days past were generally thinner than today, which one need only take a look around a Wal Mart parking lot on a Saturday afternoon to prove to themselves (I don't mean that in a sneering way, by the way). Another thing is the cult of muscles which grips modern people; today the ideal male form is heavily muscled with big shoulders, pecs, and biceps, but in days past skinny muscle was preferred and before that a barrel chest with skinny arms and sloping shoulders was preferred*. It is no surprise that a vintage A-2 jacket cut to fit a skinny man with normal sized shoulders won't fit someone today who is overweight or who works out a lot.
* The latter particularly so in the Victorian and Edwardian periods, something that is totally ignored in internet discussions about Scholte and the "drape" cut.
I read an article recently about changing societal and cultural perceptions about penis size, but that's a topic for another day...
All the A-2s I've owned have been 38s. A 36, even if it's fine on the body, the sleeves just saw under the armpits - not sure if that's as a result of my gym routine or not.
I wonder what diet has to do with modern body shapes even without gym and artificial enhancers? One hears of all the steroids used in the chicken, pork and beef industry. The connection has been made.
I'm going to have to wait for any new jackets until I hit my "maintenance" weight.
I read an article recently about changing societal and cultural perceptions about penis size, but that's a topic for another day...
Yeah, me too. I'm going to guess that back in the day, people didn't generally over-indulge in the kind of bad diets that people do today. And they were likely more active (lower car ownership in the 30's and 40's), so I guess it was much easier to maintain a regular weight?
My weight goes down over the summer because it's too hot and humid to eat, and then goes up again over the winter.
TBH, that post of mine looks a bit wanky, "ooh look I've put on this much weight" but I didn't mean it that way when I posted it.
It was meant more of a warning to fellow members who might go to the gym and exercise. You can seriously change your shape in a relatively short time and that can seriously bugger up your jackets. I've been working out fairly seriously for 10 months and doing some landscaping since we got the house here and I went to put on my WPG A-2 last week which I wore heaps last year and now I can't even get into it. I'm lucky that it was only a $150 jacket but I would've been ****** if it had been a $1,000 jacket.
Just a word of warning for anyone here, be careful if you have a nice jacket collection and you're working out/doing lots of manual labour you might get a nasty surprise when you go to put on that favourite jacket of yours.
Maybe the silver lining is I can start deciding what I'm going to get jacketwise all over again.
Not everyone's shape changes. I've been pretty much the same weight since I was 20, several decades ago. A leather jacket I bought in 1985 still fits me well. It's largely luck or genes, I've never exercised but I've also never eaten badly. I fit 40, 42 or 44 depending on the pattern.