Black Prince
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 66
- Location
- London, UK
Hello, guys. Stumbled across your site this evening and it felt weirdly like coming come. Where have you been all of my life?! As proud owner of two Aero jackets, currently contemplating a third (thinking brown or cordovan Barnstormer, but wondering if I can get away with it, given London's rising temperatures and lack of a proper winter), I'm delighted to find a hotbed of fellow obsessives!
Anyway, as well as top-quality leathers I collect vintage waterproofs, especially oilskins and rubberised motorcycling gear. A few months back, I was lucky enough to win a Belstaff 'Ironhyde' coat:
Here's me in it (not on a bike, sadly):
(Decapitated because a) I'm still a little iffy about putting full-face photos up online, and b) I'm not wearing a hat or helmet - the shame!)
It's a heavyweight beast, in the same kind of waterproofed material used to make Belstaff's famous Black Prince suits, and generates a lot of heat. It's quite a technical garment too, with all sorts of little functional details like the shoulder flap that fastens over the front to stop rain getting in, and the through-crotch thing that stops the coat blowing up in strong winds. It seems also to be possible to strap the coat's 'skirts' around one's legs, presumably to make it easier to wear it on a motorcycle.
I'm wondering if anyone here can shed some light on the history of these coats. I'm pretty sure Belstaff didn't patent the Black Prince 'plasticated' stuff until the 1950s, but I think the coat's design is based on earlier despatch rider outfits and may have been available in heavy gaberdine or the like.
Can anyone tell me more?
Anyway, as well as top-quality leathers I collect vintage waterproofs, especially oilskins and rubberised motorcycling gear. A few months back, I was lucky enough to win a Belstaff 'Ironhyde' coat:
Here's me in it (not on a bike, sadly):
(Decapitated because a) I'm still a little iffy about putting full-face photos up online, and b) I'm not wearing a hat or helmet - the shame!)
It's a heavyweight beast, in the same kind of waterproofed material used to make Belstaff's famous Black Prince suits, and generates a lot of heat. It's quite a technical garment too, with all sorts of little functional details like the shoulder flap that fastens over the front to stop rain getting in, and the through-crotch thing that stops the coat blowing up in strong winds. It seems also to be possible to strap the coat's 'skirts' around one's legs, presumably to make it easier to wear it on a motorcycle.
I'm wondering if anyone here can shed some light on the history of these coats. I'm pretty sure Belstaff didn't patent the Black Prince 'plasticated' stuff until the 1950s, but I think the coat's design is based on earlier despatch rider outfits and may have been available in heavy gaberdine or the like.
Can anyone tell me more?