Feraud
Bartender
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- Hardlucksville, NY
Sometimes a Black Leather Jacket is just a black leather jacket.
Corky said:The reason some people don't wear black leather is simple: in places like New York, Boston, San Francisco, and Los Angeles, the wearing of black leather has become a signifier of membership in the S&M community.
If one wears black leather, one sometimes can become the recipient of unwanted attention.
I once owned a classic double breasted black horsehide European overcoat. The kind that people associate with the Heavy in WWII espionage movies. (I acquired it in a flea market in Amsterdam for twenty bucks.)
I was at the time living on the West Side of Manhattan and one of my upstairs neighbors had a trio of untrained German Shepherds. These dogs had the nasty habit of attacking random pedestrians in the following manner: one would grab the victim by one leg, the second would chomp onto the other leg and the third dog would try to bite whatever anatomical target that was left. Only a tall pair of boots prevented a serious mauling the first time I met these animals, but they did manage to shred the legs on my favorite pair of Levi's.
After my initial encounter with these beasts, I wore my heavy black leather overcoat every time I went out the door that winter. But my neighbor eventually got rid of two and kept the other one on a leash, so the threat was diminished and another canine encounter never happened.
However, it was trendy to wear the black leather trench coat, so I wore in now and again, until one particular day.
I was walking down a long block near the docks when I noticed that a shady looking character was following me. I stopped and he stopped. I kept moving and he kept moving.
Finally, I ducked around a corner and into a doorway. When the shady character came around, I confronted him.
I said ""OK, mister, you've been following me for a couple of blocks. Listen: if you follow me for one more step, I'm gonna punch you in the nose!"
And this guy says to me: "You'd do that for me? Do you promise?"
I told him that was not my style. He explained that he had made an honest mistake, that the black leather trench coat was considered a powerful statement in the social circles in which he moved.
And so I went home, took off that coat, and never wore that damned thing again.
Feraud said:Sometimes a Black Leather Jacket is just a black leather jacket.
My reasons: walking, biking, driving, being in the elements.David Conwill said:I won’t wear a leather jacket without some reason for doing so (i.e. riding or flying).
Sausage & mash. No, no, I jest. S&M = SadomasochismNavin323i said:I'm not familiar with that acronym... S&M? What's that?
That's a great (no pun intended) looking coat & you wear it well. I would love to own one like it one day.Fletch said:The brown leather trench coat is problematic in the former East Bloc countries as the black one is in large US cities - and on a larger scale, because the brown coat was once the not-so-secret uniform of the secret police. Drawing the attention of the man in brown might end with far worse than a pop in the chops.
I wouldn't feel constrained from wearing one in New York or Boston, but I would not take a chance in Budapest or Prague.
Fletch said:My reasons: walking, biking, driving, being in the elements.
I do admit to a fascination with flight, though I am not a pilot. If I were, I would be an open-cockpit, low-altitude, wind-in-the-wires pilot. Sadly, I lack a spatial and detail-oriented mind. I would be a crash waiting to happen.
Most important to me is the "personality" a good jacket gains as I wear it. That is comforting and satisfying in a very basic, tactile way, a way very different from cloth garments.
A good jacket - like a good hat - is sensible armor for the everyday world.
jon z said:Sausage & mash. No, no, I jest. S&M = Sadomasochism
That's a great (no pun intended) looking coat & you wear it well. I would love to own one like it one day.
John in Covina said:I am reading some of these posts and find it funny how what was acceptable as fashion is now some silent signal about "lifestyles" in the urban setting. There is a lesson here about urban living, being "non-judgemental" and the concept of "I did not get that memo on that."
Somebody needs to post the rules, I remember there being a buzz about "signals" like what side men had their stud or earring or this thing about having a neckarchief in ones back pocket and what side was what. Fashion co-opted! Codes are no good with out the code book.
Next is the code about wearing penny loafers with DIMES in them and what does it say if you wear Bass weeguns with sweat socks...
rippy444 said:I have two black jackets similar to our man Fletch and they look fine. A nice jacket, a good shirt and the right or any hat "tops it off" I also have my Harley Davidson "95th Anniversary brown and black leather jacket. At a meer cost of $650.00 in it's day" It looks good also. Leather has always been around. It is protective. Ask me I know. I slid down the road with leather on and I still have my skin. They cut the jacket in half and gave it back. I"ll send some pictures when i can afford a camera, I mean if the wife lets me borrow it.:eusa_doh: lol RIP
JoeNiblick said:I'll agree that brown in a much more common choice here, but I don't know that there's an outright hatred for black.
James Bond wears a black Aero:
That is midweight. I can tell because the shine is more matte compared to FQHH.AngryNJ said:I could not find a matching thread about Daniel Craig using search. Can anyone tell me if this is (opinions are fine) heavy fqhh or maybe midweight? This looks spot on for the jacket I plan to order from Aero. Thanks!