Sir Jacket
Practically Family
- Messages
- 855
- Location
- London, United Kingdom
Greetings, all. I have owned perhaps five Aeros over the years and have progressively returned each one – not out of substantive dissatisfaction but because of changing personal style combined with a continuing search for the perfect jacket. In each case I have taken advantage of Aero's trade-in policy: aprroximately half the new price of the jacket deducted from the next purchase.
My most recent Aero is a cordovan halfbelt. I thought I had achieved something close to that elusive perfection with it – the leather is wearing in very nicely, too – when a friend remarked offhandedly that the jacket was "camp". I think – I hope –*that she was referring to the close-fitting, cropped style. (Aero does say that the halfbelt is one of the few of its makes that suit women equally well as men.)
Now, of course, I am virtually paralysed with uncertainty and indecision. Should I yet again trade in an Aero (I was thinking for a simple cordovan Highwayman)? That would mean forgoing yet more wearing-in; if I had stuck with one Aero in all this time its patina would have reached some quite extraordinary level of beauty. Or should I ignore her taunts and accept the imperfectability, like life, of leather jackets? Or should I, damn it, just own two?
Your thoughts kindly received,
Sir Jacket
My most recent Aero is a cordovan halfbelt. I thought I had achieved something close to that elusive perfection with it – the leather is wearing in very nicely, too – when a friend remarked offhandedly that the jacket was "camp". I think – I hope –*that she was referring to the close-fitting, cropped style. (Aero does say that the halfbelt is one of the few of its makes that suit women equally well as men.)
Now, of course, I am virtually paralysed with uncertainty and indecision. Should I yet again trade in an Aero (I was thinking for a simple cordovan Highwayman)? That would mean forgoing yet more wearing-in; if I had stuck with one Aero in all this time its patina would have reached some quite extraordinary level of beauty. Or should I ignore her taunts and accept the imperfectability, like life, of leather jackets? Or should I, damn it, just own two?
Your thoughts kindly received,
Sir Jacket