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Andrew Mier

One of the Regulars
Messages
132
Yes, at your size go with the 46. I've owned Several ELMC jackets and I wear a 44.

Would a 46 be too big in the chest though? Because this jacket looks like it has a boxy shape to it, I don’t want to drown in fabric.

I like my jackets to fit nice and fitted with just a tee shirt. That’s whybI was thinking the 44 would possibly work.
 

tmitchell59

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,462
Location
Illinois
Would a 46 be too big in the chest though? Because this jacket looks like it has a boxy shape to it, I don’t want to drown in fabric.

I like my jackets to fit nice and fitted with just a tee shirt. That’s whybI was thinking the 44 would possibly work.

Here is a video with two ELMC Californians, one is Havana and sized a 46, the Walnut is sized 44. Both are gone.

I did this video several years ago. There are a couple of Goodwear jackets in the video, both of those are gone too. I was probably 185 pounds, 5'9"

These jackets are fitted even with the "boxy" shape.

 

MrProper

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,839
Location
Europe
Been a long time since Lewis Leathers stopped being biker gear. The armor is soft and intended to be worn off the bike.

I have the Lewis MK1 jacket and the padding is just quilted wool. So I assume the one you are looking at is also just soft padding. Also 700 EUR is about £600. A new Lewis custom jacket would cost about £750~800, but you get exactly what you want. To me used at 700 EUR isn't the best value.

Thanks for the info.
Yes, the price is certainly too high.
I have now found out that it is actually a Racing Jacket No. 442 made for Urban Rider with pockets for armour.
At Lewis it costs 910 GBP, at Urban Rider 850 GBP + 72 GBP for the armour. I.e. that is then rather 1070 EUR + costs for customs handling.

https://www.urbanrider.co.uk/lewis-...-jacket-urban-rider-armour-ready-edition.html
https://www.lewisleathers.com/productinfo.html?code=Rac442
d3o-kit.jpg
Since the dimensions are on the tight side, I will probably rather not take the risk.
 

Andrew Mier

One of the Regulars
Messages
132
Here is a video with two ELMC Californians, one is Havana and sized a 46, the Walnut is sized 44. Both are gone.

I did this video several years ago. There are a couple of Goodwear jackets in the video, both of those are gone too. I was probably 185 pounds, 5'9"

These jackets are fitted even with the "boxy" shape.


Great video and thanks for the info Terry. Looks like I will be holding off on the 44 then. The ELMC in Walnut you had looked incredible by the way!
 

Canuck Panda

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,129
@Marc mndt
Short answer = No.
Long answer:
My deerskin work gloves, still spongy in the palm, but the fingers worn down through the years so it's less spongy now. These gloves been worn for about 8 years now, soaked through countless of times, and no conditioning ever applied. One of the best thing I ever bought. The leather is only about 2.5 oz thick
My old deerskin riding jacket, also still spongy in a few area. Been with me also for about 8 years. I fell a few times in it, nothing major, nothing showed through. Washed it countless of times, dried it countless of times. No conditioning ever. Looks a little shabby now, but still going strong. Riri zips held up, lining needs replacing. The leather is also about 3 oz, about the same as the Lewis sheepskin.
My new deerskin (Wapiti), only a month old and worn a couple inside the house. Super thick at 4.5 oz, but hand feels just like the Lewis sheepskin, creases super fast like it too.
I am expecting my Lewis sheepskin to behave more or less like my deerskins. The leather will stay relatively spongy but as it wears thinner it will be less spongy. And hopefully zero maintenance required.
Lewis sheepskin seems like really good stuff. Don't worry about it!
IMG_5674.jpg
IMG_5675.jpg
IMG_5676.jpg
IMG_5679.jpg
 

Mrfrown

One Too Many
Messages
1,584
@Marc mndt
Short answer = No.
Long answer:
My deerskin work gloves, still spongy in the palm, but the fingers worn down through the years so it's less spongy now. These gloves been worn for about 8 years now, soaked through countless of times, and no conditioning ever applied. One of the best thing I ever bought. The leather is only about 2.5 oz thick
My old deerskin riding jacket, also still spongy in a few area. Been with me also for about 8 years. I fell a few times in it, nothing major, nothing showed through. Washed it countless of times, dried it countless of times. No conditioning ever. Looks a little shabby now, but still going strong. Riri zips held up, lining needs replacing. The leather is also about 3 oz, about the same as the Lewis sheepskin.
My new deerskin (Wapiti), only a month old and worn a couple inside the house. Super thick at 4.5 oz, but hand feels just like the Lewis sheepskin, creases super fast like it too.
I am expecting my Lewis sheepskin to behave more or less like my deerskins. The leather will stay relatively spongy but as it wears thinner it will be less spongy. And hopefully zero maintenance required.
Lewis sheepskin seems like really good stuff. Don't worry about it!
View attachment 356798 View attachment 356799 View attachment 356800 View attachment 356802

What what?! Is the brown deer/elk jacket one you had made at JL?
 

skybert

One of the Regulars
Messages
112
I may or may not be ordering a Suburban. How heavy (or even uncomfortable) is LW 4+ oz HH?

@Carlos840 recently got a super thick (5+ oz?) Appalachian and seems pleased, @deswaaf thinks his Suburban is comfortable because the pattern is good, I think @JMax has more than one 4+ LW, but he also rides. Others (@ton312 ?) think 4 or 4+ oz is too much for a jacket if you're not riding.

I tagged people I think may know something, but all opinions appreciated. It's between 3.5, 4, and 4+ for me.
 

Mrfrown

One Too Many
Messages
1,584
I may or may not be ordering a Suburban. How heavy (or even uncomfortable) is LW 4+ oz HH?

@Carlos840 recently got a super thick (5+ oz?) Appalachian and seems pleased, @deswaaf thinks his Suburban is comfortable because the pattern is good, I think @JMax has more than one 4+ LW, but he also rides. Others (@ton312 ?) think 4 or 4+ oz is too much for a jacket if you're not riding.

I tagged people I think may know something, but all opinions appreciated. It's between 3.5, 4, and 4+ for me.

@Boyo has had a few Suburbans too
 

Canuck Panda

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,129
What what?! Is the brown deer/elk jacket one you had made at JL?

Yup, that's my first JL. It exceeded my every expectation. Waiting on my second JL to fully endorse the brand though. Consistency is everything for me! But they are pretty awesome.

I may or may not be ordering a Suburban. How heavy (or even uncomfortable) is LW 4+ oz HH?

@Carlos840 recently got a super thick (5+ oz?) Appalachian and seems pleased, @deswaaf thinks his Suburban is comfortable because the pattern is good, I think @JMax has more than one 4+ LW, but he also rides. Others (@ton312 ?) think 4 or 4+ oz is too much for a jacket if you're not riding.

I tagged people I think may know something, but all opinions appreciated. It's between 3.5, 4, and 4+ for me.

I have a 4.5 oz LW J24. I don't think if it were 3.5 oz or 4 oz would make any difference. To be fair, not the entire jacket is 4.5 oz. There are thinner and there are thicker areas. This tend to be the case with most horsehide jackets I have, the thickness will vary from place to place.
LW horsehide tend to be stiff when new but becomes pliable within just a few wears.
Can't wait to see your new Suburban!

j24.jpg
 

skybert

One of the Regulars
Messages
112
Thanks @Mrfrown!

And thanks @Canuck Panda for your input. You must be the first person to say there isn't much of a difference in feel between 3.5 and 4.5 :p That being said, I love the hefty look of 4+. Your jacket looks great.
 
Messages
17,105
Location
Chicago
I may or may not be ordering a Suburban. How heavy (or even uncomfortable) is LW 4+ oz HH?

@Carlos840 recently got a super thick (5+ oz?) Appalachian and seems pleased, @deswaaf thinks his Suburban is comfortable because the pattern is good, I think @JMax has more than one 4+ LW, but he also rides. Others (@ton312 ?) think 4 or 4+ oz is too much for a jacket if you're not riding.

I tagged people I think may know something, but all opinions appreciated. It's between 3.5, 4, and 4+ for me.
I think 4-4.5oz you’re ok. 5.5oz. World of hurt.
 

Canuck Panda

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,129
@Torstein I have jackets that has noticeably thicker sleeves on one arm and not the other. This happens a lot with horsehide, except Shinki, they are very uniform thickness compared to Horween and others tanneries.

LW horsehide is heavyweight stuff. At least in my experience. So advertised 3.5 oz isn't gonna be different than advertised 4.5 oz. On the same jacket, you will get spots that are closer to 3 oz and other spots that are closer to 4.5 oz. But overall it's still heavyweight leather.

If you like the Suburban design, go for it! It will be a good jacket no matter what the advertisement says (3.5 or 4.5 oz). It's still gonna be a heavyweight jacket.

Lost Worlds J24 Measurements 000-8.jpg

There's two layers on the lapel, so about 1.9mm, this is probably why it was advertised as a 4.5 oz horsehide. I am sure if I measure other parts I can get a reading closer to 3 oz thickness. But it won't make this jacket not a heavyweight.
 
Messages
10,196
All of mine are claimed to be 4oz or more. The ones I have bought new lost their “stiffness”pretty fast. Be active in them. Get them wet. The CHP is very soft. I can fold it into a backpack. His d pockets/cross zips have stiff front panels but those break in too, over time. I think you will be stoked with the suburban. The newer hide isn’t as stiff or hard to break in either.
 

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