Worf
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 5,207
- Location
- Troy, New York, USA
Can't believe you consider that jacket "baggy". Oh to be able to buy off the rack.
Worf
Worf
Doesn't look baggy. Maybe you're used to a more modern trim fit. Seems to me clothes from the current era are about two styles of fit - oversized or undersized. Where are the just right options?? And why do young men today wear tight suits with no arse and short sleeves? Where's my whiskey?
On VintageTrends the coat was listed as a size 32, but it has no tag, so we can derive the actual size from measurements:
p2p 19,3'' (49 cm);
shoulder to shoulder 18 (46 cm);
shoulder seam to end of the cuff 24,5'' (62 cm)
length 30,7'' (78 cm).
For comparison, my labelled 34R 1966 peacoat (photos on page 2) measures:
p2p 19'' (48 cm);
shoulder to shoulder 17,7 (45 cm);
shoulder seam to end of the cuff 25'' (63 cm)
length 29,5'' (75 cm).
They are quite different in shape, and the overall cut of the WWII one is remarkably trimmer, in spite of its slightly greater p2p.
Yes. Could it be a tight 36? The fact that these old coats often come with no size number makes quite aleatory talking about size in terms of 34, 36, etc.