BellyTank
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 7,055
Good stuff, HJ!
Is the "ventile liner" the "windshirt" of previous posts?
Could you describe it?
Let's see if the string vest, under your "shell" doesn't **** up the water like
a wick...
String T-shirt style undershirts- Swedish and Danish, are available here as surplus and are a great skin/under-layer. They are, of course, quite stretchable and conform to a range of sizes. I have worn mine beneath my Swedish Army woolen undershirt, which is of the non-itching variety,
by virtue of being knitted from fine, worsted yarns. (I have seen these being marketed on a specialist, outdoor website for the grand price of £60!)The string vest probably helps by keeping the wool off the skin. Very warm but not sweaty.
Actually, these Swedish woolen undershirts are very, very good-
plenty long, with a buttoning, cotton placquet, rib knit cuffs and thumb straps.
We await your next installment...
Re- the size of the Swedish Anoraks- I have 2, which seem like a useful size,
for a longer, looser Anorak but, as I mentioned, their relative cheapness
and generous size lends them well to becoming sewing machine fodder, if a smaller, shorter example is required. Enough cloth left over to make a hat, perhaps... I need to make one of them smaller,
more akin to the Cadet Smock size.
I guess, re: size/length of Anoraks, there are different requirements for a windproof shell-climbing activities, for example, could use a smaller, shorter, snugger variant and walking, or general cold weather, outdoor pursuits, could benefit from a larger/longer one, with more layering room and flexibility of use.
B
T
Is the "ventile liner" the "windshirt" of previous posts?
Could you describe it?
Let's see if the string vest, under your "shell" doesn't **** up the water like
a wick...
String T-shirt style undershirts- Swedish and Danish, are available here as surplus and are a great skin/under-layer. They are, of course, quite stretchable and conform to a range of sizes. I have worn mine beneath my Swedish Army woolen undershirt, which is of the non-itching variety,
by virtue of being knitted from fine, worsted yarns. (I have seen these being marketed on a specialist, outdoor website for the grand price of £60!)The string vest probably helps by keeping the wool off the skin. Very warm but not sweaty.
Actually, these Swedish woolen undershirts are very, very good-
plenty long, with a buttoning, cotton placquet, rib knit cuffs and thumb straps.
We await your next installment...
Re- the size of the Swedish Anoraks- I have 2, which seem like a useful size,
for a longer, looser Anorak but, as I mentioned, their relative cheapness
and generous size lends them well to becoming sewing machine fodder, if a smaller, shorter example is required. Enough cloth left over to make a hat, perhaps... I need to make one of them smaller,
more akin to the Cadet Smock size.
I guess, re: size/length of Anoraks, there are different requirements for a windproof shell-climbing activities, for example, could use a smaller, shorter, snugger variant and walking, or general cold weather, outdoor pursuits, could benefit from a larger/longer one, with more layering room and flexibility of use.
B
T


