Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

How To Paint On A Leather Jacket, Part 1: Inspiration

Stand By

One Too Many
Messages
1,741
Location
Canada
How To Paint On A Leather Jacket, Part 1: Inspiration

Around here, we all love our WW2 flying jackets and the A2 in particular.
And some of us also love the nose- and jacket-art that adorned the fighters and bombers of the era too and the squadron patches and the fighter/bomb group patches and the pin-up girls and the names of the aircraft and even the colours and fonts - it all evokes a certain appeal of that era.
As a result, perhaps you have thought of wishing you would like to paint something like that on your jacket - to personalize it and make it truly unique in the world and undeniably your own?

That was just how I was feeling back in 1993. I had an Aviation Leathercraft A2 jacket and just felt it lacked ... something ... and I really just wished it could have some jacket art on it. But how would I go about doing that? Could I do it?
So back then, I went down to Hibbert Bros. on Surrey St. in Sheffield's city centre. Hibbert Bros. was a truly great art supply shop that had been there donkey's years when I was growing up - ands is sadly now long gone. But I went to ask about painting on a jacket and if they knew anything about how to do it. The two ladies behind the counter were great.
"Oh yes" they said. "We've had many bikers coming in here for years and asking the same thing and we sort them all out." That was encouraging!
And over about half an hour, they proceeded to tell me everything I needed to know on how to do the art myself - and I've followed their general instructions with every piece of jacket art I've done - and I have expanded upon it with my own acquired art skills and I now shall tell you what they told me and what I've learned.

Some thoughts on inspiration and what to paint...

But before all of that, I would say that there's the preliminary work to consider that is worth mentioning; namely how do you decide what to put on your A2 jacket?
Well, I'd suggest that it all starts with decent reference material. Try to get your hands on a few good books on WW2 insignia, aircraft nose art and of jacket art; the Maguire & Conway books such as “Art of the Flight Jacket” and “American Flight Jackets” (thanks again, Nick 123! You're the best!) are truly great. In there, you'll see dozens upon dozens of truly great and inspirational jackets of all the various theatres of war with the differing patches of various materials, some with minimal art works, others with a name of the aircraft on it in a nice 1940s font, others with a design and the lettering together and some with mission tallies of various styles.
With a tasty beverage and your feet up, enjoy slowly poring over them and make a note of those that appeal to your eye - and ask yourself why they appeal to you. Perhaps it’s just the name tag and patches, or the name that you find cool - or it's the font or colours that appeal - or the pin-up girl - or the aircraft that was painted on it and the angle/profile of it.
If it is the font only, you could copy it precisely - or write something else in that font but in a name that's personal to you. Enter "1940s fonts" into a search engine and you'll find loads on the web. Many are free and you can type in the name you want and the website will display that name in that font. You can adjust the size and then hit Print, et voila! Then you can simply take your hardcopy to a photocopier and adjust the copy size to fit the size of the jacket. Then you can get a tracing off that! It works for me every time and I've never paid for a font.

If it's the pin-up girl you are drawn to, ask yourself if it's the actual girl you like - or the style of the art/artist? You can find vintage pin-up girls galore online and in books such as “For The Boys – The Racy Pin-ups of World War II” (Collectors Press) and it may be worth looking at the other works of the artist to see if there is another that appeals more.
Personally, I'll add here that I find some (but by no means all) of the vintage pin-up art of the 1940s and early 1950s very appealing (and I make no apologies for it. Like all art, it is subjective) - but modern representations of nose art that adorn modern USAF aircraft leave me stone-cold. Back in the day, the girls were classy/cheeky and in accidental and innocent poses and they always left something to the imagination and were hand-painted. In contrast, the modern pin-ups that you see on B-52 bombers and A-10 Warthogs seek to emulate the era of days gone by, but by comparison, are totally unsatisfying (to me) in that the pin-ups are of a contemporary look – less innocent and more like a professional "dancer" (stripper) than the girl-next-door or office secretary - and are sometimes quite lewd and are always airbrushed (which imbues another distinct change in character of the art); all of which lacks any charm whatsoever for me. But that's just me.
Therefore, try hunting down the artist and the original work you are after as greater details and colour balance can be seen on-line or on another print, depending on the image resolution. Get the best you can acquire and I'd suggest spending some money there if you need to as it will reward you later.

If it’s the squadron and group patches you like, then the “Battle Colors: Insignia and Aircraft Markings of the U.S. Air Force in WW2” (Robert A. Watkins, Schiffer Military History) series of books are truly indispensable and mine have paid for themselves many times over and I couldn’t possibly have done what I’ve done without them.

As for the name for your jacket, I'd suggest keeping a list of names that you would put on an aircraft as if it was you flying in it. What would you suggest to your crew as a possible name? I kept a list for years in an old notebook and would simply add to it as the names came to me and I'd think "Man! That'd be sooo cool to have that on a jacket!" and into the list it would go for another day ....

In the instance of my latest jacket design to be painted, some of you will recall my tale of how Willow, one our rescue dogs from Texas, fell through the ice on a nearby frozen river on a Winter pre-dawn dog walk and I had to lower myself down a steep bank and into the chest-deep icy water to push her out - which suddenly left me in the same predicament as her of how to get out!!! Without regaling the full story again, I broke some ice to get upstream to a better part of the steep bank with tree roots so I could grab hold of them and lift myself up and clambered out and made it home in the -25C wind-chill - and I mentioned it here purely to relate how my ELC Irvin/C-3 and Buzz A-10 gloves fared in extreme conditions, as I know I wore them in rather unusual circumstances.
The story got all very nice replies and the general response was "Man, she's a lucky dog. You were both lucky!"
And it got me thinking that I was a lucky dog too!
As stated here on my first post, my Aero ANJ-3 jacket art is based on an original ANJ-3 that had been on display at LAX airport and had very cool MTO theatre-made leather patches and bomb tallies painted on the front-right panel - and I added my mission tallies to represent all the animals that my girlfriend and I had had together over the years. Saving one dog in particular from Texas started all this jacket art - we called him Bo - and he was our first rescue from Texas; hence the Lone Star State leather patch (a copy of an original) and his rabies tag and shelter ID tag became the zip pullers and I had his shelter ID number stenciled into the lining of the jacket with a 0- prefix so it would look like the serial numbers seen on the tails of USAAF bombers.
And suddenly, after that morning, I knew I wanted to paint on the back panel to commemorate this very cold brush with danger that Willow and I had together: and so Lucky Dog was the name.

So I went through all my reference books and found a design on an A2 that really appealed and the one I liked was “Shack Rabbit”.

ShackRabbit.jpg

So with that for my inspiration, I abandoned my simple text ideas and I created the name Lucky (instead of Shack) - in the same (but very similar to Shack Rabbit) cursive font as my first work “Stand By” (as a sort of homage) - and worked it up from a free font online.

LuckyDogIdeas.JPG LuckyDogStencil.jpg

The DOG part was also created from a free 1940s font that almost perfectly matched the original font of Shack Rabbit.
Again, both were sized to match using a photocopier and it became a simple but patient matter of working them together to get the right size and in relation to the other.
As my ANJ-3 is a jacket design unique to 1943, I chose to add the USAAF "Star and Bar" (as seen on Shack Rabbit) but the type appropriate to that year and I added it and moved it over and sized it appropriately to balance the design a bit.
Another difference is in the colours I’ll use. The original Shack Rabbit lettering appears to be cadmium yellow deep with a black drop-shadow, which is fine as the jacket is russet. However, my ANJ-3 is very dark brown and any black paint would disappear into it and barely be seen, so I chose to use a lighter burnt sienna as it’s a nice complementary colour to the cadmium yellow deep and is reminiscent of that era.

LuckyDogColours.JPG

And yet, I still feel like doing a new version of Stand By – but adding Esquire’s Miss September, 1952. I got an original sheet of the calendar from eBay and it’s amazing how much more detail there is than the illustration I first saw in a book, but the blacks of her strappy shoes and pullover really lend it more to a russet jacket, I think, so they’ll stand out more. A design for another day and another jacket, I think.

MissSeptember1952.JPG

But you can see how the choice isn’t easy. And that part I can’t help you with either!

And with that all prepared, then I made my stencil - and that's what I'll explain next ...


End of part 1.
 
Last edited:
Messages
16,803
Inspiration is the toughest part... I don't know what I'd want to see on my jacket. It would take me a year to decide on something. But jacket art is only good for A-2's and sadly, I haven't got one of those. Some day, perhaps...

Fantastic read your threads are, StandBy! :D
 

nick123

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,371
Location
California
Inspiration is the toughest part... I don't know what I'd want to see on my jacket. It would take me a year to decide on something. But jacket art is only good for A-2's and sadly, I haven't got one of those. Some day, perhaps...

Fantastic read your threads are, StandBy! :D

Come on Monitor....slap your favorite band on one. ;)
 

Stand By

One Too Many
Messages
1,741
Location
Canada
Come on Monitor....slap your favorite band on one. ;)

Absolutely!
This is why I intentionally entitled this thread How To Paint On A Leather Jacket - and not How To Paint WW2 Pin-up/Nose Art on an A2- these basic principles can be transferred to any jacket to paint whatever you want - say, BSA, Triumph or Norton on the back of a biker jacket - or just a name - like Heinz Knoke's jacket; he was the Luftwaffe pilot who wrote "I Flew for The Fuhrer" and who had just his girlfriend's name on his Luftwaffe jacket in plain white paint. It all works.
And my friends were into the pu*k-music scene when we were at school and they painted band names like The Cramps, Dead Kennedy's and The Clash etc. on their black leather biker-style jackets but used just white and red Airfix enamel paints and did it roughly, with no prep and by hand - and these techniques would work there too, but you could just make a neater and more permanent job of it.
 
Last edited:
Messages
16,803
Nick, don't got one... Or rather, got too many. And since I've only got MC jackets, I can't put up some of that biker stuff because that's too posey and hipsterish nowadays. I'd only really like to have either a name or a stylish illustration of my girl on my jacket. Let the barfing begin. I know I'm lame, same as I know that one day soon she's gonna dump me for some rich guy in a suit with a sports car and a yacht, but all the same...

StandBy, that's a crazy cool story about you rescuing the poor thing!
 

Stand By

One Too Many
Messages
1,741
Location
Canada
Nick, don't got one... Or rather, got too many. And since I've only got MC jackets, I can't put up some of that biker stuff because that's too posey and hipsterish nowadays. I'd only really like to have either a name or a stylish illustration of my girl on my jacket. Let the barfing begin. I know I'm lame, same as I know that one day soon she's gonna dump me for some rich guy in a suit with a sports car and a yacht, but all the same...

StandBy, that's a crazy cool story about you rescuing the poor thing!

Not lame at all, IMO - I'd just give it a lot of thought and research into how you'd work it on a jacket and make it look cool … 'cos painting on a jacket is like getting a tattoo - once on, it's not coming off - but you can always paint over it.
As for your assumption on your girlfriend dumping you - I wouldn't invite that energy in and do everything to prevent that possibility. And I'm sure it's not the case … Good guys don't always finish last, you know!;)

As for my story - I can't seem to find it in the archives …
So the story went that I was on a very cold pre-dawn dog walk in the woods at the end of a really cold winter. It was -15C that morning, with wind chills of -25C and so I was wearing my ELC C-3 under my ELC Irvin, Aero RAF sweater, Buzz Rickson gloves and LL Bean flannel-lined jeans and one of my B-2s on my lid.
At that time, the park (a large wood with a river - long frozen at that time) was totally deserted and dark as it was 5.30AM or so, and so I could let the dogs off-leash and they all had coloured lights on their collars so I could keep an eye on them and know who was who and where.
Willow, our golden lab/Sheperd mix always ran all over like a galloping hatpin and went all over as usual, so I would see her amber light dashing this way and that … and she was way ahead of me and I saw her light go down off the path and down to the frozen river - and I heard a "C-c-crack" … and her light stopped moving.
I thought "Oh no …".
I called her and her light didn't move. It just stayed still ...
I ran as fast as I could on the frozen path and the other two dogs followed me and I got to her - and she was way down below me - she'd fallen through the ice and was in the hole she'd made, holding onto the edge of the ice with her front paws. I knew I had to get her out quick.
So I lowered myself down on the steep bank and grabbed an exposed tree root with my left hand and hung down as far as I could from that and reached down and grabbed her collar - and tried to lift her up - and out.
But she was too far below me and too heavy (she's about 55lbs - with a dry coat!) and I ride bikes every day - so all my strength is in my legs - not my arms! I just couldn't do it! I couldn't heave her up the steep bank from where I was … I had no leverage.
So I knew I had just one other alternative - the only alternative - and that was to get in the river and push her up and out from behind.
So I lowered myself down - and slowly in - and yes, it was cold but manageable, and I wasn't thinking too much about it. The alarming thing was how deep the water was - I expected it to go to my waist but it went up to my chest! I was also surprised at how hard it was to walk as the river bed was chock full of tree debris - that hurt my shins and ankles as I tried to get a stable platform to do what I needed to. I had to reach way down under the water to get my hands down below Willow's back end and, with my legs to push, I heaved her up over my head and up the steep bank - and out. And out she went … safe.
And so then it's me down there … and it was time to get out.
And then I noticed a complete lack of exposed roots to grab hold of on the steep bank. Oh. So now I'm in the same boat. How do I get out of this now?
I stood there for a few moments - and if someone had walked by and seen me - a guy standing in a frozen river in the dark - they'd have called the police or something. I must have made quite a surreal picture standing down in there in a hole of the ice … but TBH, I wasn't so cold. I could feel my mental processes slowing down a touch … but I just knew I had to get out … quick.
So I broke the ice and made my way up-river about 10ft to a section on the bank where I saw roots and could lift myself out.
So I lifted myself up - and then I was COLD. Man, that was something else … awful! I was suddenly horrifically cold!
I crawled on my hands and knees up the bank and to the path - and there was Willow - chasing a squirrel up a tree, oblivious to the danger she'd been in. And then I see my Irvin growing ice on my arms and gloves! It was I was getting a severe dusting of icing sugar, growing thicker by the second … so weird! Ice!
Suddenly, our Rottweiler saw me on my hands and knees and thought I was playing a new game - so he promptly charged me from the side and knocked me flat to the frozen ground. Then he's jumping around me and pouncing on me! This was no way to start a morning. I hadn't even had coffee!
I got to my feet and knew I had to get back to the car ASAFP! My jeans had turned to cardboard and my legs were freezing cold - I was sooo cold - but I will say that my core felt not as bad with the wool sweater, C-3 and Irvin! Who knew?!
I got the dogs all on their leashes and hurried to the car … and I got there and suddenly realized that I'd centrally-locked the car with the keys and they'd been in my back pocket - and they' d been in the river! They were still there … <phew!> and the central locking still worked off the key! (well done, Honda!) I got home and hit to the shower … and I was lobster pink!
And oddly, I remember that I couldn't stop coughing until the late afternoon - and felt chilled - although I knew I was warm …

I told the tale here to relate that my Aero sweater/ELC C-3/Irvin combo had been worn in extreme conditions - and they came through! And my Irvin developed a nice new "nap" up to the chest. Fancy that!
And as I said, people here were all very kind and supportive and some had said I was just as lucky as Willow - something that hadn't struck me at the time … so I decided on Lucky Dog to be the reminder of me and Willow on that day when things could easily have run awry.
As a cold water treatment for an Irvin, I can't recommend it.
 
Last edited:

Forum statistics

Threads
109,092
Messages
3,074,000
Members
54,091
Latest member
toptvsspala
Top