technovox
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,241
- Location
- San Francisco
Excuse me if this has been discussed before, but I can’t seem to find this topic specifically addressed in any searches, and it seems timely.
When ordering a custom jacket, is it necessary to slavishly follow every last detail of the original (say in the case of a Buco J100 or Half-belt?) Or is it acceptable to customize in order to allow for changes in today’s size, taste, functionality, (ie. selecting the hardware, changing the size and placements of the pockets, zippers, or amount of drop front, and other details that would never have been a feature found on an original.)
Or should one bypass the repro conundrum altogether and find a good original (assuming that’s possible).
In my earlier years of collecting there was never this kind of discussion. When it came to a rare Eames chair, Bertoia sculpture, Rolex, or whatever, one always sought out the original. Even the best of repros were considered inferior, cheap knock-offs with little or no value.
But jackets seem to come with a whole different set of criteria, quality and design considerations. Why the difference?
I’ll concede that often times originals just don’t fit right, and have issues such as smells, fit, wear, and/or functionality. But there’s a beauty with the worn, beat look, years of being handled and cherished that result in character, balance, and patina that a repro may never achieve.
And yet repros have a big advantage in that the customer is able to get the look without the pain, and tailor that look to his/her body type, taste, climate and comfort needs.
So at what point does a jacket design cease to have that coveted cache and timeless style of the original and start to venture into a “franken-jacket” with little or no balance or historical relevance? From the moment one changes a zipper, snap, or design detail? Or am I fooling myself- will the repro always be a pale imitation of the original? Can a repro be better than the original?
I’m sure many of you have given this much more consideration and grappled with these issues far more than I, so what are your thoughts?
When ordering a custom jacket, is it necessary to slavishly follow every last detail of the original (say in the case of a Buco J100 or Half-belt?) Or is it acceptable to customize in order to allow for changes in today’s size, taste, functionality, (ie. selecting the hardware, changing the size and placements of the pockets, zippers, or amount of drop front, and other details that would never have been a feature found on an original.)
Or should one bypass the repro conundrum altogether and find a good original (assuming that’s possible).
In my earlier years of collecting there was never this kind of discussion. When it came to a rare Eames chair, Bertoia sculpture, Rolex, or whatever, one always sought out the original. Even the best of repros were considered inferior, cheap knock-offs with little or no value.
But jackets seem to come with a whole different set of criteria, quality and design considerations. Why the difference?
I’ll concede that often times originals just don’t fit right, and have issues such as smells, fit, wear, and/or functionality. But there’s a beauty with the worn, beat look, years of being handled and cherished that result in character, balance, and patina that a repro may never achieve.
And yet repros have a big advantage in that the customer is able to get the look without the pain, and tailor that look to his/her body type, taste, climate and comfort needs.
So at what point does a jacket design cease to have that coveted cache and timeless style of the original and start to venture into a “franken-jacket” with little or no balance or historical relevance? From the moment one changes a zipper, snap, or design detail? Or am I fooling myself- will the repro always be a pale imitation of the original? Can a repro be better than the original?
I’m sure many of you have given this much more consideration and grappled with these issues far more than I, so what are your thoughts?