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Lesser Known Japanese Jacket Brands

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17,512
Location
Chicago
Seems like all the brands discussed in this thread are relatively well known. Certainly around here. The real lesser known outerwear brand “from Japan” is Sudco. I’ve seen dozens of these vinyl jackets over the years. Obviously not of interest (I wouldn’t think) to people interested in the current lineup of Japanese makers but it is interesting.

Sudco, which still operates today, is a massive importer that deals in reproduction and OEM parts for vintage Japanese made motorcycles. Their catalog is fairly intimidating. You can order just about any part you can imagine for just about every model of Japanese made motorcycle from the late 60’s to the present. At some point the catalogs also included jackets like these:

A0B1C84D-A2B3-4BFA-934C-1D7A49CE1FC8.jpeg

4175E717-DF95-4833-B2CD-7E01814C652C.jpeg


I can’t recall any Japanese brands or imports prior to the early 2000’s? I personally lost interest in most Japanese stuff after brands like The Few and RMC NZ ceased to exist. Those two felt like the high water mark for me. I do like Rainbow Country and most of their styles. Electric leather studio is cool. I can’t keep track of whether or not the current Japanese offerings are actually just one huge conglomerate or not.
 

Jasonissm

Practically Family
Messages
598
Seems like all the brands discussed in this thread are relatively well known. Certainly around here. The real lesser known outerwear brand “from Japan” is Sudco. I’ve seen dozens of these vinyl jackets over the years. Obviously not of interest (I wouldn’t think) to people interested in the current lineup of Japanese makers but it is interesting.

Sudco, which still operates today, is a massive importer that deals in reproduction and OEM parts for vintage Japanese made motorcycles. Their catalog is fairly intimidating. You can order just about any part you can imagine for just about every model of Japanese made motorcycle from the late 60’s to the present. At some point the catalogs also included jackets like these:

View attachment 469920
View attachment 469921

I can’t recall any Japanese brands or imports prior to the early 2000’s? I personally lost interest in most Japanese stuff after brands like The Few and RMC NZ ceased to exist. Those two felt like the high water mark for me. I do like Rainbow Country and most of their styles. Electric leather studio is cool. I can’t keep track of whether or not the current Japanese offerings are actually just one huge conglomerate or not.
Toyo Enterprise is the main huge conglomerate, but I think a lot of the smaller brands (if they're separate, their headquarters all seem quite dispersed around Japan and most primarily focus just on amekaji clothing in general) just OEM out their leather jackets to factories like Y2, Four Speed, Electric Leather Studio or Rainbow Country. The main difference lies in the patterns and how well they grade them in my opinion.
 
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17,512
Location
Chicago
Toyo Enterprise is the main huge conglomerate, but I think a lot of the smaller brands (if they're separate, their headquarters all seem quite dispersed around Japan and most primarily focus just on amekaji clothing in general) just OEM out their leather jackets to factories like Y2, Four Speed, Electric Leather Studio or Rainbow Country. The main difference lies in the patterns and how well they grade them in my opinion.
Yes I recall the Few jackets having what I would consider to be the most “vintage correct” patterns. Broad shoulders and chest, sharply tapered waist and sleeves that were not linguine thin. The older RMC had that same general aesthetic and pattern feel.
To my eye, most of the stuff I see from the current Japanese patterns looks too modern, too narrow and surprisingly too long. There are certainly exceptions but that’s the impression I get overall. There’s clearly a market for that though.
 

Blackadder

My Mail is Forwarded Here
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Yes I recall the Few jackets having what I would consider to be the most “vintage correct” patterns. Broad shoulders and chest, sharply tapered waist and sleeves that were not linguine thin. The older RMC had that same general aesthetic and pattern feel.
To my eye, most of the stuff I see from the current Japanese patterns looks too modern, too narrow and surprisingly too long. There are certainly exceptions but that’s the impression I get overall. There’s clearly a market for that though.
The longer jacket length is perfect for the low rise jeans crowd. There are countless instances when fellow loungers advise new Aero etc owners to wear higher rise pants/jeans.
 
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17,512
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The longer jacket length is perfect for the low rise jeans crowd. There are countless instances when fellow loungers advise new Aero etc owners to wear higher rise pants/jeans.
For sure. My jeans run the gamut in terms of rise but my preferred jacket length doesn’t change. For instance, this Thurston bros HB felt too long. Almost like a plainsman, which is fine but it was a 30’s HB, so it felt a bit off:
1F35ED2B-A3A5-4688-A408-167D6A7209BE.jpeg

The longer length does help hip huggers but I think it comes at the expense of the jacket, when they begin to look stretched.
 

Blackadder

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3,826
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For sure. My jeans run the gamut in terms of rise but my preferred jacket length doesn’t change. For instance, this Thurston bros HB felt too long. Almost like a plainsman, which is fine but it was a 30’s HB, so it felt a bit off:
View attachment 470023
The longer length does help hip huggers but I think it comes at the expense of the jacket, when they begin to look stretched.
Yes they do look odd. I am not saying I like them. You do have your 60s, 70s jacket to go with low rise jeans. I can't imagine telling the crowd to go buy a East West jackets to match with their low rise jeans. Lol. I honestly think they should stick with LL if they wanna wear low rise.
 
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Canuck Panda

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,730
I can’t keep track of whether or not the current Japanese offerings are actually just one huge conglomerate or not.
^^^This
I also have a feeling it's like this, that there are one or two big factories that makes all the Japanese retail branded (private labeled) jackets. The brands never cross over from each other in the same season, even in the same style, they would offer different leather to differentiate, but essentially it's still the same jacket.

For example, Jelado's Winchester is done what seems like the same 1.5mm deer used on the FW:
Image1.jpg

And Naked Sun (Fine Creek) is done in buffalo:
Image2.jpg

And since Fine Creek seems to be doing a better job at marketing these days they get three sku (three leather options) vs just one from slower selling Jelado.
And these are what I would presume to be made at the same Rainbow Country factory, skived seams small needle stitches.

If my suspicion were true, that they are all made by the same factory or two, I'd like to find out about the factory and try to get it direct so no heavy mark ups.

This reminds me of my Chinese jackets. That they are mostly made from the same mega factory, Pineal Jet leather in north east China. But every one of its "retail" partner would get slightly different jackets with slightly different leathers.

Maybe this should go into the Japan and Asian vs Western brand difference thread. But the biggest difference is that one is semi-mass produced (I have no problem with this, I like skived seams and laser stitches), and other is really more custom in the sense that no two jacket are gonna be the same even same style same leather because it's single person bench made. The expensive pricings of the Japanese jackets is because of distribution channel layers (lots of middle guys), not because it is a better jacket than the western brands that sells directly. Different construction yes, but no better or worse, but definitely more expensive.
 

Blackadder

My Mail is Forwarded Here
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3,826
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China
^^^This
I also have a feeling it's like this, that there are one or two big factories that makes all the Japanese retail branded (private labeled) jackets. The brands never cross over from each other in the same season, even in the same style, they would offer different leather to differentiate, but essentially it's still the same jacket.

For example, Jelado's Winchester is done what seems like the same 1.5mm deer used on the FW:
View attachment 470051
And Naked Sun (Fine Creek) is done in buffalo:
View attachment 470053
And since Fine Creek seems to be doing a better job at marketing these days they get three sku (three leather options) vs just one from slower selling Jelado.
And these are what I would presume to be made at the same Rainbow Country factory, skived seams small needle stitches.

If my suspicion were true, that they are all made by the same factory or two, I'd like to find out about the factory and try to get it direct so no heavy mark ups.

This reminds me of my Chinese jackets. That they are mostly made from the same mega factory, Pineal Jet leather in north east China. But every one of its "retail" partner would get slightly different jackets with slightly different leathers.

Maybe this should go into the Japan and Asian vs Western brand difference thread. But the biggest difference is that one is semi-mass produced (I have no problem with this, I like skived seams and laser stitches), and other is really more custom in the sense that no two jacket are gonna be the same even same style same leather because it's single person bench made. The expensive pricings of the Japanese jackets is because of distribution channel layers (lots of middle guys), not because it is a better jacket than the western brands that sells directly. Different construction yes, but no better or worse, but definitely more expensive.
Again these are all small niche brands working closely with small workshops. There is no big factory save for Y'2. There is no room for big factories. If there are factories with huge capacity, Mushman would not be getting its jackets from Bill Kelso. The lower end mass produced jackets are imports.
At the rate and quantity these brands are selling, that cannot support a big factory. Brands that require big enough capacity are Beams, United Arrows, Jourrnal Standard and Urban Research etc. And where does Beams get its leather jacket? Cockpit USA for one.
You can certainly get the Y'2 direct. You can even get the RC direct. These workshops prefer taking dealers' order instead of carrying stock or taking individual direct order. Take the Few for instance, they worked closely with RM serving RM exclusively until their break up.
 
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sshack

A-List Customer
Messages
384
Location
California
Again these are all small niche brands working closely with small workshops. There is no big factory save for Y'2. There is no room for big factories. If there are factories with huge capacity, Mushman would not be getting its jackets from Bill Kelso. The lower end mass produced jackets are imports.
At the rate and quantity these brands are selling, that cannot support a big factory. Brands that require big enough capacity are Beams, United Arrows, Jourrnal Standard and Urban Research etc. And where does Beams get its leather jacket? Cockpit USA for one.
You can certainly get the Y'2 direct. You can even get the RC direct. These workshops prefer taking dealers' order instead of carrying stock or taking individual direct order. Take the Few for instance, they worked closely with RM serving RM exclusively until their break up.

Wasn't familiar with "Beams, United Arrows, Journal Standard..." I googled a few searches, nothing really stood out yet. Are these popular / quality brands?

How do you order Rainbow Country direct from the factory?
 

Blackadder

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Wasn't familiar with "Beams, United Arrows, Journal Standard..." I googled a few searches, nothing really stood out yet. Are these popular / quality brands?

How do you order Rainbow Country direct from the factory?
Sorry, you can't order from RC directly. You can buy/pre-order it at dealers.
Both Y'2 and RC has their own brands that you can find at dealers.
Beams, UA, JS are just mid priced High street brands like Polo, Banana Republic, J Crew etc. I'd say a bit more like J Crew.
 

dwilson

A-List Customer
Messages
320
Location
LA
Yeah Beams is commonly referred to on other style forums as Japanese J Crew. I like the cut of their shirts but the fabric and quality isn't anything to rave about. At least the shirts I have were made in Japan at least.
 

Canuck Panda

I'll Lock Up
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4,730
I am quite certain Johnson in San Fran makes some jackets for Beams. The mouton they used for the Beams jackets are quite nice and different than the stuff I'd normally get from them.
 

Aloysius

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,000
"Colimbo is the low cost outlet/version of The Real McCoy‘s and mostly made in China but labeled ( and marketed via/ ) in Japan…( BTW this is also the case for BR since 2017 for all their goods and for some even earlier).
Greetings from Kyōto. "

This was unsourced and incorrect. There have been a few people on VLJ pushing these rumors over the years. You always need to keep a filter in mind when reading some of these posts lol

Hmm, this Orgueil has some nice stuff. But 169,000 yen for steerhide. Also, I will never be able to remember their name unless I'm reading it.

If you're into denim, an easy reference point might be that Orgeuil is the same brand as Studio d'Artisan.

It's their spinoff more based on European (especially French) styles than American ones.
 

cbez

One Too Many
Messages
1,788
Location
CA
Resurrecting this thread to post a mini review of my new four speed. I liked my iron heart jacket which was 'supervised' by four speed, so I wanted to give one a shot on the used market.
The teacore cowhide is super thick while still being supple. It has that gentle teacore from legitimate wear, not the rub off in 5 wears trying to catch the trend like some brands are doing. They have grainier belly panels in the armpit and back gussets.

Fit wise it's pretty good, fits small for a Japanese brand. The 38 fits similar to my 34 iron heart and 36 rainbow country.

The sleeves have a lot of taper and narrow forearms, and probably wouldn't work for a lot of US arms, if you are Popeye mode skip this model. if you have average to big wrists I probably wouldnt zip up fully.

Lining is a comfortable flannelish.

My only fit issue is some slight peaking in the shoulders, might be due to sleeves riding up a bit. We'll see how it settles in.

20231117_123019.jpg
20231117_123029.jpg
Screenshot_20231117_125517_Firefox.jpg
That's what the shoulders do
 
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jchance

A-List Customer
Messages
337
Location
Los Angeles
You can certainly get the Y'2 direct. You can even get the RC direct. These workshops prefer taking dealers' order instead of carrying stock or taking individual direct order.
Has TFL ever tried to organized a group order with RC or Y'2 directly? What I mean is that TFL sets up a group (which acts like a quasi-retailer/dealer) of say, 10 people, who are willing to pay a deposit for a particular pattern (taken from a member's collection). The spokesperson for the group contacts TC/Y2 to place the order. Once the jackets are done, the group pays the remainder for the deposit and each individual in the group receives the jackets.

The benefits are that (1) it's cheaper to cut out the middlemen, and (2) we get the exact custom jacket we want, which may not even be available on the market. Styleforum has organized these group buys fairly often, though it seems to be a bigger crowd over there.
 

Blackadder

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3,826
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Has TFL ever tried to organized a group order with RC or Y'2 directly? What I mean is that TFL sets up a group (which acts like a quasi-retailer/dealer) of say, 10 people, who are willing to pay a deposit for a particular pattern (taken from a member's collection). The spokesperson for the group contacts TC/Y2 to place the order. Once the jackets are done, the group pays the remainder for the deposit and each individual in the group receives the jackets.

The benefits are that (1) it's cheaper to cut out the middlemen, and (2) we get the exact custom jacket we want, which may not even be available on the market. Styleforum has organized these group buys fairly often, though it seems to be a bigger crowd over there.
1) Unless you can find someone who writes Japanese, there will likely be lots of miscommunication;
2) To protect their dealers, they are unlikely to offer any discount;
3) Quite a few Japanese shops are getting more weary of taking overseas direct order. Their practice is no return, no change of order/design or refund after order. They have had problems with overseas buyers asking for design changes and some requesting a refund (happens quite often because of delay in ETA). Take Clinch for example, a few years ago they switched to taking custom order only in person at their shop. Well, now they have stopped taking custom order period due to backlogs.
Beside it is not a good experience for the organiser, we have had problem with a group order to Alden a couple of years ago. We have fulfilled the min. order requirement, organiser took the money so everything is ready on our end but Alden insisted that we go thru the local dealer and after some initial exchange and bargaining with the local dealer(they were reluctant to take the order most likely because it will take up their special order quota at Alden), we were asked to wait. 2 year passed without any further communication from the local dealer and all of a sudden a week ago during a gathering, the organiser told us that the local dealer suddenly contacted him saying they are now ready to take our order. The group was disbanded and money returned to individuals long ago.
 

Canuck Panda

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,730
You could try the single operators like Electric Leather Studios or Fourspeed, I've seen both doing OEM work for others.
When Warp and Woof was still around they'd probably be the best candidate, but unfortunately I got to know that only when he was gone...
I think since most Japanese jackets are OTR, the best value is on the reseller market when the customers received their pre-orders and it doesn't fit and they unloads it for a discount, or samples from store exhibitions.
 

tuanhng614

One of the Regulars
Messages
112
1) Unless you can find someone who writes Japanese, there will likely be lots of miscommunication;
2) To protect their dealers, they are unlikely to offer any discount;
3) Quite a few Japanese shops are getting more weary of taking overseas direct order. Their practice is no return, no change of order/design or refund after order. They have had problems with overseas buyers asking for design changes and some requesting a refund (happens quite often because of delay in ETA). Take Clinch for example, a few years ago they switched to taking custom order only in person at their shop. Well, now they have stopped taking custom order period due to backlogs.
Beside it is not a good experience for the organiser, we have had problem with a group order to Alden a couple of years ago. We have fulfilled the min. order requirement, organiser took the money so everything is ready on our end but Alden insisted that we go thru the local dealer and after some initial exchange and bargaining with the local dealer(they were reluctant to take the order most likely because it will take up their special order quota at Alden), we were asked to wait. 2 year passed without any further communication from the local dealer and all of a sudden a week ago during a gathering, the organiser told us that the local dealer suddenly contacted him saying they are now ready to take our order. The group was disbanded and money returned to individuals long ago.
Group buy sounds like a good idea at first, but only makes sense for something that has quick turnaround time.

Leather boots/leather jackets take forever that the chance the buyers change their preferences/mind is fairly high.
 

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