cheaterome said:Some neat features from what I remember. It has blue cuffs on it from a b-15c and is a Bronco in a size 44 with a crown zipper!!
DUDE .... thanks.
Rome
You're quite right sir! This is a more elaborate inside pocket mod - double stitched thru leather with interior snaps added. More intricate than the ELC Monarch or the jacket in my last post above. This is the one photo of the lot that I took last year and unfortunately this particular jacket is not on display currently. BTW I prefer to think we have rich lives made more full by our jacket worship...but maybe I'm a sad type tooDudleydoright said:Thanks for posting those buddy !
The first jacket photo looks to have an extra press stud on the chest above the pocket and extra stitching that imply an stitched through leather inside pocket. Am I right ? Am I a sad anorakie type with no life ?
Dave
Burnsie said:You're quite right sir! This is a more elaborate inside pocket mod - double stitched thru leather with interior snaps added. More intricate than the ELC Monarch or the jacket in my last post above. This is the one photo of the lot that I took last year and unfortunately this particular jacket is not on display currently. BTW I prefer to think we have rich lives made more full by our jacket worship...but maybe I'm a sad type too
Dudleydoright said:Who in their right mind would do that to a $900 repro' ?
Dave
jeep44 said:8th AAF jackets,eh? here is my Dad's A2. 385th BG,548th BS, Great Ashfield,England. I wore this jacket all through college in the '70s,and I saw other guys wearing their dad's jackets,too. It is very fragile now,with a number of holes and cracks in the leather. The lining disintegrated back when I was wearing it,and I just tore it out,tag and all Maybe 20 years ago my dad had someone sew in this black lining.I live just up the road from Gt Ashfield. And not far from so many USAAF airfields. If you want any photos of the area, let me know. I'm sure I could get you some. (Local pubs and a few of the remaining airfield building etc).
I've escorted a few 'Yanks' around the area on tours and sent bits of airfield tarmac and broken perspex from Lavenham to interested relatives too over the years.
Dave
jeep44 said:8th AAF jackets,eh? here is my Dad's A2. 385th BG,548th BS, Great Ashfield,England. I wore this jacket all through college in the '70s,and I saw other guys wearing their dad's jackets,too. It is very fragile now,with a number of holes and cracks in the leather. The lining disintegrated back when I was wearing it,and I just tore it out,tag and all Maybe 20 years ago my dad had someone sew in this black lining.
Seeing these jackets displayed with other personal items and gear it's very hard not to personalize their experiences...mixed emotions indeed. I can see the modern response to the little bombs, perhaps on a repro item designed simply to look cool, but to see the original jackets is to remember these guys didn't feel very cool at times, just trying to make it in one piece to the next mission...Edward said:I've long loved the artwork on period jackets - I'm a sucker for 40s pin-up style art. I have what might be perhaps described as a 'complicated' reaction to the bomb artwork.... it has always seemed more than a little grisly to me to see those little bombs, each one marking a successful mission, sometimes, as in Dresden, where civilians have been the deliberate target. These sorts of hi-res photos where one can see that these were painted by hand, carefully and probably not long after returning from a raid, make me think about them from another angle: the relieved aircrew, returning intact (when quite probably friends and comrades didn't) marking another milestone, and a step closer going home. Difficult to imagine the mixed emotions they must have had themselves.
Burnsie said:I never thought of that - campuses in the 60's/70's must have seen their share of vintage flight jackets! In the 80's I begged my Dad to let me wear his G-1 to school, but no go.
Thanks for these pics!!!