Gamma68
One Too Many
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- 1,956
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- Detroit, MI
My measurements must've been off. Or it was all those hot dogs and burgers I've had at the family BBQs lately.
Thanks for the info! Cool that it is a real one.Yes, Jay Dee sportswear was a government contractor, and I think it still is. Have never seen that tag with the Jay Dee name on it on a peacoat, though.
This is a legitimate Navy issue peacoat. Even though this is a pre 1980 coat, it is a Melton coat and not the Kersey wool shell that is so desirable. Notice the tag for the shell information.
I would be interested in knowing if there is an insulated lining in the coat. It should be behind the standard rayon lining next to body of the wearer. It will be about 1/8" thick and noticeable to probing fingers
Yes, Jay Dee sportswear was a government contractor, and I think it still is. Have never seen that tag with the Jay Dee name on it on a peacoat, though.
This is a legitimate Navy issue peacoat. Even though this is a pre 1980 coat, it is a Melton coat and not the Kersey wool shell that is so desirable. Notice the tag for the shell information.
I would be interested in knowing if there is an insulated lining in the coat. It should be behind the standard rayon lining next to body of the wearer. It will be about 1/8" thick and noticeable to probing fingers
The last year for the Kersey was 1979. Sterlingwear says the material color is actually a very dark blue and not black. It looks black to me. I just took one of my Melton coats outside in the sunlight. I can see no blue in the fabric.Peacoat - Was wondering - what year is the last Kersey. I thought that it was 1972? Also if I remember correctly the first few years of Melton coats were a dark blue color and not black? Do you know what year they started to make the coats in black Melton?
No, you're right. There's no blue in it. Calling the cloth blue is just a historical legacy thing which shows up from time to time in clothing. The clothing industry is run through with weird terminology and labeling.The last year for the Kersey was 1979. Sterlingwear says the material color is actually a very dark blue and not black. It looks black to me. I just took one of my Melton coats outside in the sunlight. I can see no blue in the fabric.
This particular coat is a 1980 Vi Mil, which was the name Sterlingwear used for its military contracts back then. As 1980 was the first year for the Melton fabric, this was one of the first peacoats produced using that fabric.
So to answer your question as to the color, evidently the coats have appeared black from the beginning. I have another current issue Sterlingwear from the 90s that also appears black. But I bow to Sterlingwear's expertise in knowing the the color it uses in its garments. If it says blue, then blue it is.
Well, living in the Emerald Triangle, a Reefer sounds way cooler than a Peacoat...That is actually a Reefer, a peacoat once worn by officers. They can still wear them, as can Chiefs, but most wear the Bridgecoat, a longer version of the peacoat. The officers would have their rank on shoulder boards attached to the top of the shoulder on both the peacoat and the bridge coat. Golden colored buttons are used instead of the black fouled anchor buttons. Chiefs wear no rank on their bridge coats.
There is no structural difference between the peacoat and the reefer.
Does the reefer (freezer) on the ship relate to reefer peacoat?aboard ship a "reefer" is a freezer.
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Yes, the peacoat was a dress coat. I don't think it started out that way, but over time it evolved. Deck jackets were used for work parties, of which there were many in the the Navy, as I understand it.i don't know what it was like back when "ships were made of wood and men were made of iron" but when I was in the navy in the 80s the usual reefer coat was the green navy deck jacket. if you were on a working party and loading stores you wouldn't want the buttons ripped off your pea coat or have it stained by something leaking.