John Lever
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,819
- Location
- Southern England
Edward,Edward said:John, I've never seen a B1 before, though logic reminds me that there must have been something that carried that designation for the B2 to follow in series... Is the B1, in essence, a B3 with the entire skin overlayed in leather, as opposed to just the arm panels? The B2, as I understand it, was a heavy horsehide jacket with a wool lining and mouton collar - a very different beast. What was the design flow there - was the B3 a deliberate return to something closer to the B1, having decided the B2 "didn't work" for whatever reason?
I'd love to see Aero do a run of jackets along these lines... I'm especially keen on a B2 myself, but last I heard Aero had rtuled it out as they didn't feel there was sufficient market interest for a jacket design not carried into the War period....
I believe the B-1 was the first heavy jacket to be specified by the US in the 1930's. Originally I thought the liner was very short pile sheepskin at 6 mm. or 1/4 inch. But it was actually 1 inch long. The seam construction was also unique in that they were French seams, not rolled or folded like in the current version available from The Few. An example of this seam can be found on the reverse of A-2 jacket collars and on leather car seats.
Aero are serious about making a run of these jackets. I know that Will is very keen to go ahead but is constrained by workload and deliveries.
I believe that the machinists up in Scotland who work on heavy horse hide every day are ideally suited to make such a complicated jacket with the correct seams, not just a B-2 with a sheepskin liner.
Obviously the interest shown by enthusiasts will help to speed up production.
Will made my Radjacke last year, a one off at the time but to go into production and be featured on the new website to be launched in January. I hope to do a similar feat with the B-1.