Baron Kurtz
I'll Lock Up
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I know there was an awful lot of dual use of workwear as sportswear in the 1930s and 40s, as a perusal of the Pathe archive would suggest. I'm interested in the stuff that was dedicated sportswear. Whether it be for cycling, hunting, golf, whatever, there was an awful lot of stuff available that was specifically designed and marketed for sporting use.
I'll start this off with an excellent example that I recently found. I tell you without shame: this is my Holy Grail. For years I've sought this jacket, and I've never seen another one. I'd really love a Bukta one, but Macintosh will have to do! Charles Macintosh (for whom the Mackintosh overcoat is eponymous) designed the original rainproof fabric in the early 1800s, making it out of natural India rubber using a patented process. It retains its rainproof qualities after all this time. The rain just beads off. The folded metal zipper slider and stopper box date this jacket to the 1930s. It is fully reversible with patch pockets and buttons to tighten the cuffs on both sides.
If you've got some European sportswear, let's see it! Ben, I'd love to see that Lillywhites ski suit with the poles.
I'll start this off with an excellent example that I recently found. I tell you without shame: this is my Holy Grail. For years I've sought this jacket, and I've never seen another one. I'd really love a Bukta one, but Macintosh will have to do! Charles Macintosh (for whom the Mackintosh overcoat is eponymous) designed the original rainproof fabric in the early 1800s, making it out of natural India rubber using a patented process. It retains its rainproof qualities after all this time. The rain just beads off. The folded metal zipper slider and stopper box date this jacket to the 1930s. It is fully reversible with patch pockets and buttons to tighten the cuffs on both sides.
If you've got some European sportswear, let's see it! Ben, I'd love to see that Lillywhites ski suit with the poles.
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