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Loopwheeled/Vintage T-Shirts


jstavrin

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Rodeo Bill, thanks for another informative post. I do have a question for you. What was the purpose of those V-Notches in the center of the collar?

Toys McCoy Ringer

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V-Notch

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Anyone have any interesting Raglan sleeve shirts? I love the old school curvy arm holes.

Flathead

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Groovers

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And the always unpopular football T. Worn by douche bags and hip-hop heads alike. I have a soft spot for these because I've been wearing them since I was a kid.

UES

uesshirt.jpg

Denime

denimeshirt.jpg

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^^ as far as I've been told it's for stretch. Older jersey tends to be less stretchy than modern jersey is, so there'd be a section of rib (much stretchier than single jersey) in the neck, where it needs to stretch over the head. You get this on sweatshirts too. My guess is it's something that's become a bit of an appendix (like cuff buttons on a suit jacket) and it's now put on without much thought for use, even by original brands, and so also by repros. Quite often you see it's just an extra layer of the body jersey fabric stitched on top of the main panel, in which case it wouldn't help this at all...

Could well also ehlp soak up sweat I guess, or just be a reinforcement at a place where the T gets the most stress.

This is a sweatshirt, but it shows the principle... There are V gussets at the front and back, made of rib, and they're double thickness (apologies- I know BApe is anathema to some...)

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Anyone have any interesting Raglan sleeve shirts? I love the old school curvy arm holes.

I just got some Cheswick sweats with Raglan sleeves - a bit more comfortable than their BR cousins for broader shoulders...

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anyone who has the flathead flatlock seam tee care to share some insight on it with us? how's it feel? fit? durability? fit pics would be nice too..

thanks much.

one of the best shirts you will ever buy hands down. You just gotta wear it to believe it. until then read about it here...

http://www.selfedge.com/shop/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=68&products_id=596

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thanks man. i'm a 42. my prob is that most M size shirts are perfect on length but too tight on the chest. it'll be interesting to see how this shirt ages tho. i have cheepo tees from 15+ years ago that i still wear. the FH shirt was an impulse buy. wanted to see what the hype was. woulda sold it if i didn't think it was worth it. obviously i'm gonna keep. i'll post evo pic's in 15 years. .;) .

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  • 2 weeks later...

Loopwheeled Fabric!

I've seen a spike of interest in loopwheeled fabrics recently so i decided to dig up a few photographs i took of a machine for those that haven't seen what a loopwheeler machine looks like.

There are some serious misconceptions about this fabric.

Just because a fabric has tube construction does not make it loopwheeleed. Also, i'd say that about 50% of the fabric which i've felt and has been marked as loopwheeled was NOT actually loopwheeled, it's just tube body constructed fabric. It's insane to me that companies get away with advertising that their fabric is one thing when it's not, but i'm convinced that these companies themselves were fooled by their factories or textile suppliers into thinking that the fabric was really loopwheeled.

Kobayashi-san (president of Flat Head) is the only person in the world that owns loopwheeling machines which are capable doing a certain weight and feel of micro-ribbed fabric, the Japanese brand Loopwheeler actually buys their micro-ribbed fabric from Kobayashi. Flat Head are still the only clothing company i've ever come across which owns up to 65% of the machines which weave all their fabrics where as all other clothing lines don't actually own any machines, they lease or outsource production to factories.

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Loopwheeled Fabric!

I've seen a spike of interest in loopwheeled fabrics recently so i decided to dig up a few photographs i took of a machine for those that haven't seen what a loopwheeler machine looks like.

There are some serious misconceptions about this fabric.

Just because a fabric has tube construction does not make it loopwheeleed. Also, i'd say that about 50% of the fabric which i've felt and has been marked as loopwheeled was NOT actually loopwheeled, it's just tube body constructed fabric. It's insane to me that companies get away with advertising that their fabric is one thing when it's not, but i'm convinced that these companies themselves were fooled by their factories or textile suppliers into thinking that the fabric was really loopwheeled.

Kobayashi-san (president of Flat Head) is the only person in the world that owns loopwheeling machines which are capable doing a certain weight and feel of micro-ribbed fabric, the Japanese brand Loopwheeler actually buys their micro-ribbed fabric from Kobayashi. Flat Head are still the only clothing company i've ever come across which owns up to 65% of the machines which weave all their fabrics where as all other clothing lines don't actually own any machines, they lease or outsource production to factories.

IMG_2112.jpg

IMG_2113.jpg

IMG_2109.jpg

IMG_2111.jpg

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Holy shit. That is one fucking machine. How far back does loopwheeling go?

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Holy shit. That is one fucking machine. How far back does loopwheeling go?

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kiya, is there any tale tell signs to tell if a shirt is truly loopwheeled or not? I would think that there is but i have not yet seen or heard of any definitive signs to call a shirt loopwheeled other than the brand advertising it as "loopwheeled". thanks man!

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Thanks Kiya for posting that awesome machine. The only other brands I know that doesn't outsource other than Flathead are The Real McCoys (Everything from the jeans, boots to the leather jackets a truly breathtaking operation), Post Overalls and my man from Kojima, K&T Workers. There are more, but these were the first ones that popped in my head.

I think the smaller brands have more of a chance to do things in-house, but the volume that Flathead and Real McCoys do is very impressive.

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  • 2 weeks later...
Are you kidding? They're just t-shirts, man.

Looks like someone doesn't know a goddamned thing about laundering t-shirts! If you're not hand-dripping reverse-osmosis filtered water at temperatures between 5 and 10 C, at a rate of no more than 100ml a minute, and then sun drying the shirt on a day with temperatures between 65 and 73 F, you are ruining the integrity of your t-shirts, and you might as well just pick up some fruit of the looms. If you are in a hurry, you can air dry the tshirts by attaching them to the radio antenna of a classic american muscle car and tearing down the interstate.

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