This is the first of a bunch of jackets I will be liquidating.
The Real McCoy's Buco J-100, size 42, 19110, from the latest batch RMC released.
This jacket is brand new and unworn. It was tried on, I immediately preferred the fit of the size 40, and this was photographed and put back in the...
This sales thread was posted while the site was having technical issues, and now appears to be permanently corrupted. I will repost the jacket on a new thread.
I just ordered a 19110 (current version) J-100 from Standard & Strange.
I have an unworn NOS RMC 9110 (older version J-100) I recently bought that is too small... when the new one arrives, I'll compare that leather with the older version.
I imagine most of these comparisons are between new or...
Nothing from my google-fu and no replies here... I am starting to get the feeling that RMC has never actually been able to sell an unlined version J-100, ha ha.
Anyone have any experience with this jacket? Wondering about four things...
1. The measurements are different than both the current lined version, the BJ19110, and the older lined version, the BJ9110. Does the unlined version fit more like the 19110 or the 9110? Or somewhere in between the two...
Thanks for this!
Quick question- the RMC 9110 size chart Blackadder linked to shows the 40 as having roughly 18.9" shoulders, same as the current 19110... however you reckon around 17.5" shoulders for a size 40 9110, a figure I'm assuming you arrived at via your experience with your size 42...
Thanks so much for this... that 9110 chart is very, very enlightening. Some guys talk about the two fits like you need to go two sizes up in the old bs the new... doesn't appear that's the case? If I'm a 40 in the new, I'll fit into a 40 in the old?
Thanks for that, very appreciated.
Those auction links bring up another question though! I noticed that both those jackets have measurements that are way smaller than their corresponding sizes on the RMC's website.
For instance, that first auction link is a size 40 with shoulders a hair over...
Hoping I could borrow the forum's expertise here... Does anything about this jacket read wrong to you Lords of Leather? Stitching, materials, label? Or does it look good?
Just bought this, these are seller pics. It's described as new without tags. I've seen similar brown versions before, they...
Personally I am with both the OP and you on this... my mind knows that creases are part and parcel with the product, but my heart wants what it wants. If there's a good return policy and another jacket without the offending characteristic, what's the harm in an exchange?
I'm unsure what part of...
Meh. I'll be in the minority here, but at the end of the day it's your $1000, Schott has a great return policy, if you want one without the crease, get one without the crease.
It would bug me too. I'm all for wabi-sabi... just as long as the imperfections are applied by me to something...
Fine Creek jackets have a median price of $1950 at my local dealer. The RMC I just bought cost exactly that amount. A TFH I bought a month or so ago cost $2000. You won't get an argument from me that distributers drive up the cost of Japanese jackets. But at least in the case of RMC and TFH, I...
But Schott and Vanson cost pennies on the Fine Creek dollar. I think the comparison is kind of fair, no?..
You don't see that stuff out of TRM or TFH...
Just an opinion
Yeah, as Bfd70 mentioned, most guys don't do the whole sold-out-everywhere-asking-double thing here.
That said, where do you live that you need to layer in that beast? 24oz waxed twill with a mid-weight liner should keep you warm with nothing but a t-shirt down to several degrees below...
As a bartender, I take great offense to this. To clarify: many, many (too many) hipsters have somehow successfully gotten jobs that require them to mix drinks even though they have no idea what they are doing. They are not bartenders. Nor even "mixologists" (whatever the hell that is). They're...
Haven’t seen the Field leathers in person. Seen many FCL in person, and imo, they are definitely a step down in both materials and construction compared to TRM or TFH…
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