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Paul T

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Posts posted by Paul T

  1. With big thanks to Spiraltoy... this is my second 3-pleat.

    I've always wanted the duck version of this jacket. It's terrific. Same proportions as the denim, but this is unwashed so maybe a little roomier although sleeves are short. When I get time I'll post a comparison with the duck pullover. I think this is a non-Cone duck fabric - it's a dark mustard, rather than a tan colour. Somewhere way back in this thread I posted photos of them in the marketing showroom when it first came out, alongside a very distressed gingham version. I'm really happy s this is way more practical than the pullover, even if the mustard doesn't echo the tan of my recently rebuilt tricker's quite as well. Jeans are the TCB '20s.

    PTinparkbetter.jpg

  2. I hope everyone's having a great autumn.

    Mine seems to have been crazy busy, with a new job, then over the last week my nipper, once shown as a cheeky toddler on various threads here, went off to uni. In between all that managed to find enough sunny weather to dry those jeans, which came with me on my trip Saturday to say goodbye to T Jr. Along the way there's a bit of the greatest Italian deisgn.. my neigbour up the hill seems to have swapped his Ghia-designed Alfa for a Zagato.

    There will be a bit of a dump of photos here, starting with them before wash. I can't see what the photos look like until they're online (running out of disk space!) so I'll probably end up deleting a few from my second post. In an ideal world I'd have time to edit these; my Fuji doesn't give natural colours, unlike our dead Sony RX100, but I think there's at least a few photos here give the look of the jeans pretty much dead-on.

    Pre-wash, post repair... this is pretty much dead-on for colour.
    Dirtyfront.jpgdirtymain2.jpg

    Zagato.jpg

     

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    IMG_1051.jpg

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    Post-wash... the whole of the knee area and beyond is all wearing through. WE will follow up with some more heavy darning, otherwise the whole lot will go. The last wash, right side out, brought out broken stitches all over.

    fraying-1.jpg

     

     

  3. Just waiting for some goddam sun. But Lady T's expertise in repair has reached new heights. Usually we split the outside seam for a better knee repair, but as these are a bit wide managed to avoid that - and still got the patch flat. No time to darn the other numerous small holes I reckon.



    TCBrepairs.jpg

  4. those 50s ones are nice but there's no real connection with a 66 pair. The pocket shape become more square partly because they didn't have to accommodate the rivet.

    This is my old pair of circa '66 502. These were very beautiful with all lemon stitching. There are probably some differences from a contemporary 501, the bar tack is quite distinctive on this pair.

    But this is what to me is a quintessential 66 shape: lovely parallel stitching on the sides, and less of a splay than the 55. But still some splay. The arcuate is shallower obviously, than typical 50s jeans, but there are plenty shallower still .

    Yet... I just looked at all the Japanese LVC reissues from around 2000 with lots of '60s replicas including the 502. Japanese LVC tended to have more different models (they would have Japaese repros alongside the US ones). There was nothing even vaguely similar to this, in terms of shape or arcuate  - essentially because they based their repros on different originals, and there was so much variation in the 60s especially from factory to factory and probably operator to operator.


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  5. I've sat down in the design department at Levi's, looking at a new set of 60s jeans that they bought recently. I suggested to them that the shape of the LVC '66 back pockets is exaggerated - a little over square without enough taper from top to bottom - and the arcuate was over-flat. That was inherited from previous designers, for sure.

    Just read some of the previous debate, which we've visited here before. There were a good number of original jeans with similar arcuates. Pockets especially varied from factory to factory, arcuates even more so.  LVC chose a more distinctive look, an outlier maybe, to make the 66 very different from the 55 (Levis' Japan did the same for some of their models). For my money, it's the pocket shape that's dissatisfying, just a little too square.

    Obviously, first time around they meant to make the 66 jeans more distinct from the 55. I thiknk the current team know that. But my guess is they've got a lot on their plate (including the company float) and that tweaking existing cuts is low on their priorities.

    I still love my '66 though. Will update them here after their next wash.

  6. 11 hours ago, lee porter said:
    Original 1960's Big E Levi's Red Tab Trucker Jacket in Mid Blue Stone Wash. 
     
    Made in Hong Kong around 1965 when the company set up a sales office and began opening factories to manufacture Levi's clothing there. 
      
    Just copied this did this happen Paul t 

    Link?

    No, it didn't happen around 1965! They opened a Scottish plant in 1980 or so, which was a big deal and well documented.

  7. Love those!

    I've spent years trying to really break in my 1901, similar era, as in five summers, hand washes only. They were just on the turn when the TCB 20s contest started. Can't wait to revisit them, they are a lovely shape, with a terrific turquoise-tinted denim.

  8. 4 hours ago, Dry said:

    Just had 2 pairs of rigid Cone Mills made in the USA raw 1966s size W32 L36 delivered expecting that I would get V2. 

    I had 2 pairs of 1937 V2s delivered yesterday and the 1966s are a more generous fit in that size to the 1966s.

    I love the Cone Mills denim which seems similar to the 1947s I bought about 5 years ago. Having said that, I love the new ?Kaihara denim of the 1937s and they have been expertly put together in Bulgaria

    I can't upload pics - there was a problem processing the uploaded file. -200. Anybody know why?

    Although there's not the historic legacy of tone, Kaihara supplied a lot of the LVC Japan denim which was always thought to be great.

    THe -200 error has been aroudn for a bit, means we can't upload files and have to host them somewhere else.

  9. 1 hour ago, cusswords said:

    With LVC being made in Bulgaria and a Turkey does this mean Levi’s has no US made production? When is the last time that happened? 

    Officially, it's the first time it's happened I believe - although US production was contracted out, in any case, from 2003 or so when they closed their own factories, first to Taylor Togs and then to various others. They have a small scale facility in battery street where they prototype stuff, experiment with finishes, and do small runs.

     

  10. Do we know that all the raw denim is made in Bulgaria? Previously it was washed made in Turkey, raw in the US.

    If so, that is shitty. But i am sitting on a good stock. I think, for instance, things like my 3-pleat are some of the best Levi's products ever. But every mountain eventually crumbles into the sand.

  11. Loch Ness

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    NEver done it before, but had a great time wandering up mountains etc with rugby and football types

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    Scotland is drop-dead beautiful. But those bastard midges!

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    This place was the site of a Jacobite battle in 1719, after which it was reduced to rubble for 200 years.
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    Wash time soon. Needs a repair or two again.

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    13 hours ago, bartlebyyphonics said:

    Great to see you made it to Deal @Paul T!...Fingers crossed for your family and results!

    thanks Bartles. The boy done good... if the thread's running in October, we'll be posting some pix of a nice town.

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