Anyway, enough on the thread subject, the reason why so many persons of good taste are choosing Good Wear is very, very simple - their products are superior in every way. If you desire attention to detail there is no serious alternative.
In addition to the work of Professor M.R.D. Foot you may wish to read the following:
* Masterman, J. C. The Double-Cross System in the War of 1939–1945. New Haven & London: Yale University Press, 1972. [pb] New York: Avon Books, 1972. New York: Ballantine, 1982. ISBN 0-345-29743-1.
*...
No, not at all depressed, just informed! I thank you for taking the time to explain the situation. Exactly what I was after. I did the burn test and seems the thread is natural fiber, not synthetic, but it does still glow. Another response above mentioned silk as a natural fibre which glows -...
This is what i don't understand, 50% of people say this is the case whereas the remainder say synthetic threads were not uncommon, especially at the end of the war? Confused.
Thanks -
So silk glows?
To be clear it's not the patches themselves that glow, they're multi-piece leather, or the stitching which holds the multiple pieces together - it the stitching attaching the patches to the jacket that glows.
Good day to you all -
I wonder if some of the more informed members might be able to shed light (excuse the pun) on the mystery of WW2 era thread which glows under UV light. I've received contradictory information saying a) there was no thread that glowed b) US made clothing often had glowing...
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