johnnyjohnny
Practically Family
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well, i waited a long time to do this, write a review of the jacket i coveted ever since first seeing it on the eastman website several years ago.
i came to the fedlounge already primed to be a fanatic, having started wearing military clothing in high school, surplus stuff whilst the vietnam war was going on, and just coming of age prior to having had to face a draft
my fascination with militariana seasoned after i got into selling vintage watches and ended up focusing on actual mil issue stuff...a special fascination developed over german ww2 issue watches, not only selling them but keeping a healthy supply for myself including a number of 'dh' (deutsch heer, the dh marking on the back signifying a swiss made german ordnanced ww2 mil watch) such as zenith and doxa, very premium brands
so when i started buying a-2 and g-1 jackets again, a few years back, and came to this venerable forum, it wasn't long before i fixated on the 'luftwaffe jacket'
i wanted one
the first i ever saw was that on the eastman website. i liked the plain luftwaffe, not the hartmann jacket....the hartmann, though specific and worn by a famous ace, simply didn't have the clean lines and bad boy imprint, futzed up by the little button pockets on the bottom that looked like women's purses attached to an otherwise fine creation
i tried other routes prior to pulling the trigger on the eastman, first trying an aero highwayman...then a lewis leathers dominator, pretty much the jacket 'the battle of britain' bought from lewis for their actors in that production, filmed in england, in the sixties
however, the highwayman was not a luftwaffe jacket despite it's beauty, and the lewis dominator, though close, did show it's rocker elements...two superbly fine jackets...but the eastman still called to me like a messerschmitt beckoning an spitfire to 'come play' in the clouds over europe decades ago
when a good week in my line of work came in late november, i didn't wait for the boldness to leave my fingers...i went to the computer keyboard, then to the eastman website, and punched in my credit card number
of course i verified if i needed a special order, or an off the rack size...all the 44s i kept seeing on ebay of the eastman luftwaffe jackets were about an inch too small in the armpit to armpit...so when rob from eastman wrote back that their stock 46 would give me the 26" back and the 26" armpit to armpit i wore...and that it would ship in a day or so, and get to me within the week...i bit
i would have waited the 3 months that an aero takes if i'd had to, but this felicity was too perfect
so today i picked it up, fighting L.A. traffic that seemed slower than usual. the box was wrapped in brown paper, which when peeled off, revealed quite a presentation, replete with plastic carrying handle and eastman logo making it appear to be a piece of fine luggage.
inside, the jacket itself was sealed in padded bag, and when i finally got to it i found an old style tag on the puller, and a beautiful enveloped accompanying letter with jacket info...hours later i would also find in one of the pockets 'the airman's guide to ww2' cd that eastman put there as well...nice touches
as for the jacket, i guarded myself from buying into the notion that everything was beautiful about it. i had too many jackets to mention where they all looked fine, until discovering the nick in the leather, the mis-sown seam, the less than wonderful fit...followed by the need to either accept, or send it back...you all know the feeling i'm sure
well, such never happened with the eastman. as it turned out, the jacket is better than even the prose and pictures on the eastman website.
it appears to be a piece of history that has come through a time warp unused, not of this time period. as a jacket fanatic i can enjoy it, but as a vintage watch collector and seller, i can appreciate authenticity when i see it...finally not just in photos, but a finish and construction, as well as shape and cut, that is from the past...but it's new...i've seen it new in pictures, but in person i've only seen such authenticity in well worn fifty year old survivors...not fresh and strong as they were meant to be used
i've spent enough time waxing, so i'll get to it...
the leather is horsehide, and it looks as if it were from the late 30s/early 40s...in a word, it looks as bad, as evil, as in those pictures of the bad guy fliers...not the more generically processed leather of modern jackets
compared to the lewis leather dominator that i had briefly, that jacket had authenticity, but it's authenticity was not of the luftwaffe of the forties, but the leather looked like it had popped out of the 60s, meant for some brit rocker...which, in fact, was what that jacket was all about
so, in the post office, i could see i finally got what i'd been seeking.
the fit seemed cut for me...i'd have to wait until i got home to measure it, but looking at myself in the post office mirrored windows, the jacket looked clean and as if fitted...as i'm sure it would for anyone who ordered one...one note, i didn't even have to pull in the side straps to eat up extra waist size that most modern moto jackets have...i could see already that this had a bit more 'v' taper to it than modern jackets that are built more for the post war food indulgent crowd...when measured at home, i saw the larger chest to waist drop than on modern jackets...so my side straps remain uncinched, despite my 45.5" chest and 34" waist...make a note if you choose to order one of these
living in lalaland, where the weather is allegedly warm to hot, i put the jacket on immediately in the 58 degree day we had today, and went to starbux for a coffee (decaf...how sad, i know)
the jacket would be tested right away. not just by squeezing into my '82 280zx with me, and operating supplely in the 'cockpit', but at starbux, the schoolkidz had just gotten out and taken over the coffe shop with their computers....so i needed to have my decaf outdoors...the jacket kept me warm enough that there were no problems until i was ready to leave...the jacket is a short jacket as these are, and rode up a bit in the back as i curled in my outdoor starbux chair, and my shirt had also tucked out of the back of my pants, but i was comfortable and warm enough with the textured cotton lining to hang until i was ready to split...still, i could tell, this light jacket would NOT be as overly warm during other times as perhaps a wool lined highwayman would
as for the leather, it is horsehide...though i thought it would be cow when i ordered...this horse is very supple, almost soft and buttery, and barely more thick than a good goat jacket...not at all heavy on...quite a surprise, a pleasant one...oh, and definitely warmer than my a-2 or even g-1 would have been today
as much as i loved my lewis leather jacket prior to selling it to get a netbook, i have taken to the look and fit of this more...such wonderful jackets cannot be compared, but my sensibilities are to the true 'luftwaffian' style, and despite chides from bellytank on the forum, i must say that in person this is the real deal...it has a shine, but much more of a mat quality that you might expect from one of these if you went back in time and saw a german pilot's jacket laying there...the pix on the eastman site look shiny and wonderful, but they almost look too wonderful to convey that this is not just a stereotypically manufactured jacket...it looks as if from a flight museum, except without all the wear
so the fit, cut, weight, warmth and texture were all remarkable. i knew that people who saw me in the bank, or in line at starbux, or at the market later, hadn't a clue i was wearing anything of import, but i don't doubt for a moment that subconsciously, as we all do, something must have registered as being different about 'that guy with the different jacket'...not that it mattered to me...i wear the watches i wear for me, and the jackets i wear for me...i can appreciate what i have on, and, like with you all i'm sure, provides enough satisfaction
but i still got the feeling that this jacket had a unique quality in how it appeared, that at some level it was registering with people who happened to look at it...like someone who knows nothing about cars seeing, nevertheless, a rare 50s mercedes in traffic...something registers at some level that there is something different than the norm
or maybe i had inadvertently dropped acid (not)
as for the measurements, i was curious to find out with a tape measure when i got home
what i could tell from wearing it, prior to getting home, was that this did not have the neanderthallic long arms that modern motorcycle jackets have...i had seen many of the actual luftwaffe jackets in pix over the last year, and noticed they had much shorter sleeves than i thought looked best...but often in those pix the pilots had jackets that were spray painted on...a smaller size than i would think right
and so this had sleeves that were about 3/4" short of my knuckles on each arm...more the length of a real jacket, not the orangutanian distance i had become used to with motorcycle jackets...including the lewis leather dominator i had owned
at first appalled at the long arms of moto jackets, i grew to like the look...so now i had to backstep to appreciate what i had on...and because i didn't get this jacket too tight, the sleeve length is still long enough to be fine...when eventually measured at home, it turned out to be 25" from top shoulder seam to cuff vs. 26" for my dyer leather motorcycle jacket which does come to my knuckles...or the 26" that was my aero highwayman, also a knuckle dragger
as for the other measurments...whilst wearing the jacket i had the feeling that it was a perfect length for a short waisted jacket...25" is what some of my milspec a-2s are, but when put to tape, this turned out to be 25 3/4" to 26" from collar seam in the back to the end of waist...basically perfect
then i would have to test my intuition, which was that the jacket seemed to have more of a taper than any jacket i had worn...
immediately i saw i did not need to use the side buckles to cinch in the sides as i must on most motorcycle jackets that come with that option...most modern moto jackets have a 6" drop from chest to waist...so with the 26" armpit to armpit, or 52" chest this has, one would in modern jackets expect a 46" waist, or 23" waist one side...this was slightly over 22", for a perhaps 44 1/2" waist vs. a modern jacket's 46" waist...i liked that...but if that's not your shape, be aware when ordering...you may need a custom cut one made
whilst the chest at 52" gives me a little room for ease of movement, the shoulders at about 22" are beautifully just slightly oversize, though maybe a bit less than the truly oversize shoulders you see on too many jackets these days...they're about 1/2" past the actual shoulder on each side
all in all, this jacket is a perfect fit for me, given that i like a slightly comfortable fit...it's a 46, so that may give you some idea how other sizes might fit...i know many of the 44 eastman luftwaffes i'd seen on ebay had 24" or at most 25" armpit to armpits
the workmanship doesn't have to be mentioned, so all i'll say about it is that the thing appears as if straight out of a museum...the proper snaps and zips are immaculate...the sewing is perfection...i'm guessing all of eastman's leather jackets are like this, and if they are, this company is one of the elite
as for the lufwaffian (or more properly, the french motorcycle) jacket elements, they are a joy and authentically different than what i've seen in modern jackets...the neck strap, the waist strap, beautifully crafted, neither too big nor too small as on so many less expensive replicas
the zip/snap cuffs are fascinating and interesting to have on your wrist, they look of another time period, as of course they are...like 65 years ago...they are a redundant but delightful and excellently crafted feature of this jacket.
needless to say, i love it. i must credit eastman and those who made this piece for their respect of history and standards from another time and place
other elite jackets such as aero, lewis etc. may be on a par with eastman, but from what i've seen here, i cannot imagine a jacket being superiour to this...as i sit writing, the buttery soft, supple but strong, light but substantial leather is a joy to have about me
pictures will follow in a day or two.
finally, let me thank eastman for making such a product, not just for me, but for others who may purchase their wares, others for whom superiour craftsmanship is not enough, but who desire a respect and reverence for history as well...good work
i came to the fedlounge already primed to be a fanatic, having started wearing military clothing in high school, surplus stuff whilst the vietnam war was going on, and just coming of age prior to having had to face a draft
my fascination with militariana seasoned after i got into selling vintage watches and ended up focusing on actual mil issue stuff...a special fascination developed over german ww2 issue watches, not only selling them but keeping a healthy supply for myself including a number of 'dh' (deutsch heer, the dh marking on the back signifying a swiss made german ordnanced ww2 mil watch) such as zenith and doxa, very premium brands
so when i started buying a-2 and g-1 jackets again, a few years back, and came to this venerable forum, it wasn't long before i fixated on the 'luftwaffe jacket'
i wanted one
the first i ever saw was that on the eastman website. i liked the plain luftwaffe, not the hartmann jacket....the hartmann, though specific and worn by a famous ace, simply didn't have the clean lines and bad boy imprint, futzed up by the little button pockets on the bottom that looked like women's purses attached to an otherwise fine creation
i tried other routes prior to pulling the trigger on the eastman, first trying an aero highwayman...then a lewis leathers dominator, pretty much the jacket 'the battle of britain' bought from lewis for their actors in that production, filmed in england, in the sixties
however, the highwayman was not a luftwaffe jacket despite it's beauty, and the lewis dominator, though close, did show it's rocker elements...two superbly fine jackets...but the eastman still called to me like a messerschmitt beckoning an spitfire to 'come play' in the clouds over europe decades ago
when a good week in my line of work came in late november, i didn't wait for the boldness to leave my fingers...i went to the computer keyboard, then to the eastman website, and punched in my credit card number
of course i verified if i needed a special order, or an off the rack size...all the 44s i kept seeing on ebay of the eastman luftwaffe jackets were about an inch too small in the armpit to armpit...so when rob from eastman wrote back that their stock 46 would give me the 26" back and the 26" armpit to armpit i wore...and that it would ship in a day or so, and get to me within the week...i bit
i would have waited the 3 months that an aero takes if i'd had to, but this felicity was too perfect
so today i picked it up, fighting L.A. traffic that seemed slower than usual. the box was wrapped in brown paper, which when peeled off, revealed quite a presentation, replete with plastic carrying handle and eastman logo making it appear to be a piece of fine luggage.
inside, the jacket itself was sealed in padded bag, and when i finally got to it i found an old style tag on the puller, and a beautiful enveloped accompanying letter with jacket info...hours later i would also find in one of the pockets 'the airman's guide to ww2' cd that eastman put there as well...nice touches
as for the jacket, i guarded myself from buying into the notion that everything was beautiful about it. i had too many jackets to mention where they all looked fine, until discovering the nick in the leather, the mis-sown seam, the less than wonderful fit...followed by the need to either accept, or send it back...you all know the feeling i'm sure
well, such never happened with the eastman. as it turned out, the jacket is better than even the prose and pictures on the eastman website.
it appears to be a piece of history that has come through a time warp unused, not of this time period. as a jacket fanatic i can enjoy it, but as a vintage watch collector and seller, i can appreciate authenticity when i see it...finally not just in photos, but a finish and construction, as well as shape and cut, that is from the past...but it's new...i've seen it new in pictures, but in person i've only seen such authenticity in well worn fifty year old survivors...not fresh and strong as they were meant to be used
i've spent enough time waxing, so i'll get to it...
the leather is horsehide, and it looks as if it were from the late 30s/early 40s...in a word, it looks as bad, as evil, as in those pictures of the bad guy fliers...not the more generically processed leather of modern jackets
compared to the lewis leather dominator that i had briefly, that jacket had authenticity, but it's authenticity was not of the luftwaffe of the forties, but the leather looked like it had popped out of the 60s, meant for some brit rocker...which, in fact, was what that jacket was all about
so, in the post office, i could see i finally got what i'd been seeking.
the fit seemed cut for me...i'd have to wait until i got home to measure it, but looking at myself in the post office mirrored windows, the jacket looked clean and as if fitted...as i'm sure it would for anyone who ordered one...one note, i didn't even have to pull in the side straps to eat up extra waist size that most modern moto jackets have...i could see already that this had a bit more 'v' taper to it than modern jackets that are built more for the post war food indulgent crowd...when measured at home, i saw the larger chest to waist drop than on modern jackets...so my side straps remain uncinched, despite my 45.5" chest and 34" waist...make a note if you choose to order one of these
living in lalaland, where the weather is allegedly warm to hot, i put the jacket on immediately in the 58 degree day we had today, and went to starbux for a coffee (decaf...how sad, i know)
the jacket would be tested right away. not just by squeezing into my '82 280zx with me, and operating supplely in the 'cockpit', but at starbux, the schoolkidz had just gotten out and taken over the coffe shop with their computers....so i needed to have my decaf outdoors...the jacket kept me warm enough that there were no problems until i was ready to leave...the jacket is a short jacket as these are, and rode up a bit in the back as i curled in my outdoor starbux chair, and my shirt had also tucked out of the back of my pants, but i was comfortable and warm enough with the textured cotton lining to hang until i was ready to split...still, i could tell, this light jacket would NOT be as overly warm during other times as perhaps a wool lined highwayman would
as for the leather, it is horsehide...though i thought it would be cow when i ordered...this horse is very supple, almost soft and buttery, and barely more thick than a good goat jacket...not at all heavy on...quite a surprise, a pleasant one...oh, and definitely warmer than my a-2 or even g-1 would have been today
as much as i loved my lewis leather jacket prior to selling it to get a netbook, i have taken to the look and fit of this more...such wonderful jackets cannot be compared, but my sensibilities are to the true 'luftwaffian' style, and despite chides from bellytank on the forum, i must say that in person this is the real deal...it has a shine, but much more of a mat quality that you might expect from one of these if you went back in time and saw a german pilot's jacket laying there...the pix on the eastman site look shiny and wonderful, but they almost look too wonderful to convey that this is not just a stereotypically manufactured jacket...it looks as if from a flight museum, except without all the wear
so the fit, cut, weight, warmth and texture were all remarkable. i knew that people who saw me in the bank, or in line at starbux, or at the market later, hadn't a clue i was wearing anything of import, but i don't doubt for a moment that subconsciously, as we all do, something must have registered as being different about 'that guy with the different jacket'...not that it mattered to me...i wear the watches i wear for me, and the jackets i wear for me...i can appreciate what i have on, and, like with you all i'm sure, provides enough satisfaction
but i still got the feeling that this jacket had a unique quality in how it appeared, that at some level it was registering with people who happened to look at it...like someone who knows nothing about cars seeing, nevertheless, a rare 50s mercedes in traffic...something registers at some level that there is something different than the norm
or maybe i had inadvertently dropped acid (not)
as for the measurements, i was curious to find out with a tape measure when i got home
what i could tell from wearing it, prior to getting home, was that this did not have the neanderthallic long arms that modern motorcycle jackets have...i had seen many of the actual luftwaffe jackets in pix over the last year, and noticed they had much shorter sleeves than i thought looked best...but often in those pix the pilots had jackets that were spray painted on...a smaller size than i would think right
and so this had sleeves that were about 3/4" short of my knuckles on each arm...more the length of a real jacket, not the orangutanian distance i had become used to with motorcycle jackets...including the lewis leather dominator i had owned
at first appalled at the long arms of moto jackets, i grew to like the look...so now i had to backstep to appreciate what i had on...and because i didn't get this jacket too tight, the sleeve length is still long enough to be fine...when eventually measured at home, it turned out to be 25" from top shoulder seam to cuff vs. 26" for my dyer leather motorcycle jacket which does come to my knuckles...or the 26" that was my aero highwayman, also a knuckle dragger
as for the other measurments...whilst wearing the jacket i had the feeling that it was a perfect length for a short waisted jacket...25" is what some of my milspec a-2s are, but when put to tape, this turned out to be 25 3/4" to 26" from collar seam in the back to the end of waist...basically perfect
then i would have to test my intuition, which was that the jacket seemed to have more of a taper than any jacket i had worn...
immediately i saw i did not need to use the side buckles to cinch in the sides as i must on most motorcycle jackets that come with that option...most modern moto jackets have a 6" drop from chest to waist...so with the 26" armpit to armpit, or 52" chest this has, one would in modern jackets expect a 46" waist, or 23" waist one side...this was slightly over 22", for a perhaps 44 1/2" waist vs. a modern jacket's 46" waist...i liked that...but if that's not your shape, be aware when ordering...you may need a custom cut one made
whilst the chest at 52" gives me a little room for ease of movement, the shoulders at about 22" are beautifully just slightly oversize, though maybe a bit less than the truly oversize shoulders you see on too many jackets these days...they're about 1/2" past the actual shoulder on each side
all in all, this jacket is a perfect fit for me, given that i like a slightly comfortable fit...it's a 46, so that may give you some idea how other sizes might fit...i know many of the 44 eastman luftwaffes i'd seen on ebay had 24" or at most 25" armpit to armpits
the workmanship doesn't have to be mentioned, so all i'll say about it is that the thing appears as if straight out of a museum...the proper snaps and zips are immaculate...the sewing is perfection...i'm guessing all of eastman's leather jackets are like this, and if they are, this company is one of the elite
as for the lufwaffian (or more properly, the french motorcycle) jacket elements, they are a joy and authentically different than what i've seen in modern jackets...the neck strap, the waist strap, beautifully crafted, neither too big nor too small as on so many less expensive replicas
the zip/snap cuffs are fascinating and interesting to have on your wrist, they look of another time period, as of course they are...like 65 years ago...they are a redundant but delightful and excellently crafted feature of this jacket.
needless to say, i love it. i must credit eastman and those who made this piece for their respect of history and standards from another time and place
other elite jackets such as aero, lewis etc. may be on a par with eastman, but from what i've seen here, i cannot imagine a jacket being superiour to this...as i sit writing, the buttery soft, supple but strong, light but substantial leather is a joy to have about me
pictures will follow in a day or two.
finally, let me thank eastman for making such a product, not just for me, but for others who may purchase their wares, others for whom superiour craftsmanship is not enough, but who desire a respect and reverence for history as well...good work