dudewuttheheck
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 4,405
All fair @dudewuttheheck . It's just me. I think of this jacket as a natural evolution of the traditional cafe racer style. Which this is. Every detail... No, not detail but rather every feature of this jacket is in keeping with the style without sacrificing a single feature that is an integral part of it. I don't personally care for historical accuracy as much as I do for the general... vibe if you will, of the thing and that, combined with extreme durability and functionality - aspects I find most important - tell me that this jacket has it all. It's still a true American cafe racer jacket. The real deal.
And that's all I want.
Don't know how to explain any better.
I believe that as a Schott original, this jacket is going to be a collectors piece in a few decades, just like Buco today. . . while repro will always be just that - a repro.
Anyway, yeah, as @ton312 says, the Japanese sell the image. The cosplay. Which they've turned into caricature of itself.
Looking at the old photos of bikers of the 40's, 50's, even 60's... Man, hard to find a single bloke that's dressed like what you see advertised on all these Japanese, and more and more US/European sites selling "heritage" clothes. Suspenders, rolled cuffs, shiny engineer boots, not to mention tattoo's and stuff etc... I honestly don't believe anyone outside of The Wild One set dressed like that. Especially not for the price tag they've hanged onto this stuff which makes it all so ironic it's not even funny.
That's why I love this Schott. It speaks to me. And it says I don't need to cosplay.
Hey, if you love it, go for it! I'm sure it will look better on you than it does on their website. I really feel that @ton312 was right when pointed out the picture quality issue.
I agree that like you said, nobody really dressed like that, but is that such a bad thing?