rolando_ol
Familiar Face
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If I'm 39" chest, but 5'7 height and want a snug fit, should i order a medium or large?
If I'm 39" chest, but 5'7 height and want a snug fit, should i order a medium or large?
Smithy, that's a great looking jacket. The website photos that Thor kindly put up don't do it justice. The color is fantastic. Seriously, how do they make such a great jacket for only $150?
It makes you ask why would anyone spend $500, $600, or more on an A-2 when this one (WPG) looks as good as any I've seen!
Combination of factors, I'd imagine. I'm sure labour costs is one way of keeping the price down - inevitably, it's gonig to cost more to have something like this run up in Scotland or the USA than, say, Pakistan. A lot of the cheaper, fashion oriented leather jackets on sale here in the UK are produced in Pakistan, and some in India. I'd guess one of those as the source given how many cheaper goathide jackets I've seen come from those places, and given that the WPG bits I've bought before now are labelled "Made in Pakistan". Quality is often surprisingly good, though you can see where they cut corners in terms of hides, smaller panels (you can find a lot of jackets that are vaguely Highwaymanesque, for instance, but they'll typically be a split back, without the 'waistband' panel, or the yoke), lower quality hides, cheaper linings... limiting sizings to S/M/L et cetera is, I'm sure, cheaper than grading to a full range of sizies - 40,42,44, and so on. I'd imagine the same issues come into play here. Knits might well be a blend, for instance, or not made entirely to the original pattern (do they have a seam? Not sure if that's been commented on here). Of course, it's always going to be cheaper to produce in numbers this sort of thing and sell OTR rather than producing something to order, with custom sizing, in a small boutique workshop. Not to denigrate this in any way - there's clearly a market for this jacket - but I don't think we're comparing like with this if we are to hold this up against the likes of Aero, ELC or, indeed, Goodwear.
The A2 is, of course, a very simple pattern, easy to mass produce. Naturally, this is by design... There's a fair argument to be made that in spirit at least something like this run up and sold off the rack is closer (in spirit, if not in eproducing the details of a specific contract) to what was thrown at the raw USAAF pilot in 42 than a custom-sized perfectly tailored repro with the very best of leather, hardware, and so on. These are definitely to be welcomed: It's really nice to see a starter A2 on the market which is that much more like "the real thing" than the civilianised versions with handwarmer pockets and thel ikes that have typically been what is available at that price point. I can see this having a lot of appeal to those who don't want to wear an A2 outside of a USAAF reenactment costume, or who need a starter jacket for that when they can't afford one of the established repros, or who want a jacket they can patch and paint without worrying they are limiting the wear-potential of an expensive leather jacket.... and so on. I'm tempted myself to look at one of these to patch up as a wartime successor to an AVG jacket, for the CBI theatre... Should my nephew in ten years' time be interested in A2s, I can see buying him somethingl ike this as an eighteenth birthday present - affordable for me, and not so expensive that when he grows out of it in two years' time it seems a terribly expensive folly.
It will certainly be interesting to see them examined side by side. I'd say it's the same as why any of us buy expensive, niche leather jackets be they USAAF repro or be they civilian designs. There will always be the little add ons, the incremental improvements between one of these and an Aero/ELC/ w.h.y. and one of John's jackets.... For anyone with no ceiling on their budget, I doubt they'll run with one of these instead of a Goodwear, but for those who do have to watch the pennies, it's all about the law of diminishing returns. As with any market, each incremental improvement will raise the price markedly... most people will have a point at which they are prepared to compromise the very most specifically accurate detailing against price. I don't imagine the established brands will be threatened by these jackets from WPG, however what they will do is put reasonably period-accurate looking jacket within the reach of many more folks than in the past, which is definitely a good thing.
I wonder if they do custom orders? Tweaking lengths...
Well, I spend that kind of money because I have the proportions of a gorilla, instead of the proportions of a 1940's teenager who grew up malnourished by the Great Depression. I'm simply not thin and boney enough for a super trim fit jacket.
My Dad was one of those kids. They weren't all malnourished, that's kind of a modern spin. Sure they had little in those days but many did eat regular meals and they ended up a mix of strong trim and well build guys. The real key to their build was they were very young. Many an A2 wearer today is 27 to 72 years. Years and decades older than the original wearers. The jackets are trim but can be worn by a wide range of builds, just not fat.
Tim, there is not much I can add to what everyone else has said about your high quality great value A2. It looks excellent for the price.
Yes, way better than many more expensive examples...in fact, way better than most. But I can only go by the photos here.
Everyone knows my feelings on G&B. Two good friends of mine bought A-2's and B-3's on my recommendation. Now all three of us feel that G&B is the brand to beat.
Lets through price out the window, take this jacket, and some others that cost 3, 4, even 5 times as much.
Then lets do a double blind test. I would love to see the faces on the people when they found out the winners...and the losers.