Love mine in the colder months, I'll be sporting it soon, always something to look forward to this time of year. Can't beat the smell of an old waxed jaisket!
It's not the quite the same thing. It's ventilation not vapour transfer as in the modern goretex's etc.. It's colder air from the hem rising up as the warmer and damper air escapes at the neck. The body heat and movement drives it. Like opening the bathroom window to let the steamy air out after a bath or shower. Unlike the fabrics that do the close fitting vapour transfer the wax doesn't get overwhelmed in muggy weather, so long as the person inside is warmer than the air around. It doesn't need to escape through the fabric. That roomy ventilation is very comfortable.
I agree about a well cut garment, but this is an over jacket. It's not girding anyway, and it allows layering options appropriate to season.
Up to yourself whether you make it a shell or a jacket. My woolen liner means my jacket is not only draught proof but comfortably warm and it never feels wet inside because of the wool.
I don't usually wear much under mine unless it's perishing cold (as in the photo, when I'm layered up in a set of merino thermals and a merino top with a silk and wool scarf.
Like single layer ventile, single layer wax I find chilly to wear. Each to their own.
I handmake buttonholes on everything from silk to tartan; I agree they're all the better for a little discreet reinforcing. It's hard to do that on the wax unless you plate on another layer of the cotton and stitch it down or make a proper bound buttonhole. For handstitched/tailored buttonhole stitched, I find a gimp thread around the slit is a very trim way of keeping it taut.
The cotton is a very simple tabby weave, it unravels and it tears along the grain if not carefully dealt with.
I have some ripstop cotton waxed fabric .....came as a remnant from a factory that made uniforms and clothing for specialist units. It's superb, but I've never seen it again anywhere and there was no manufacturers mark on the cloth or the bolt. If you can find that, I'm sure there'd be interest
Eyelets at the bottom of the pockets rust and wee bits of stuff get stuck in them. They also (brass ones too) rub away at the inside of the pocket and hole the lining.
Sorry to sound so negative; it's genuinely not intentional, just that I've been asked so often to repair wax jackets that have become pretty knackered but are still someone's "the Jacket" that I've seen most of the problems with the stuff.
cheers,
M
big_swede, I wouldn't make a wax jacket too fitted. The looseness allows the evaporation of sweat and moisture. It's like the Inuit do with their heavy skin parkas. Loosen the neck and hem and movement shifts the air underneath.
It's not 'breathable' the way that modern membrane fabrics are, but it works very well indeed to keep the jacket warm, supple and dry underneath.
Not for heavy, hard, work, but for a cold, dreich day and out for a walk, or hanging around in, it's the most comfortable jacket I own.
atb,
M
Sounds cheaper than the fjallraven jobby thats similar John.
Wow! and theirs is half the length of mine!
So mine is worth about £300 retail!
Discount for the man who pointed it out to you?
I will do you one for £299.00
Ach well thats a steal I'll take two
You gimme a sensible quote we'll talk turkey John