Burberry?
Aquascutum?
This is also nice:
http://www.cordings.com/CordingsSite/product/Cotton%20Rainwear/RN021STONE.htm
(Another new prchase by my Bro.)
I find the odd thing with raincoats is that style and price are rarely linked. You can get some very good looking macs very cheaply.
Obviously the more you pay the better quality you get (usually). But, purely in terms of style, raincoats seem to be one of the few items where you can often get more by spendng less.
One of the best macs I ever had was from a shop off Petticoat Lane in London (famous for its street market in the East End). It was made in Poland under the name 'Impeccable', believe it or not. Quite a heavy-duty, biscuit-colored cotton with nice top-stitched detail & an iridescent greeny/blue lining. The twin on the outside of the classic fly-fronted Burberry in style. Lasted for years - Cost around £40.
Very good observations.
I too have found that cheap models are just as functional as the expensive ones.
Burberry and Aqua. are probably just trading off the name, these days.
Their prices are astronomical.
In North America the "London Fog" raincoats were ubiquitous at one time.
TV
I've a couple of Vintage London Fog macs - Very nice. I love the old label of Big Ben appearing out of the fog...
I saw a very good City raincoat by them recently - a real classic picked up by Chris H. on his last American visit. So it's good to know that they're still going strong.
http://www.allegri.com/
My all-cotton raincoats, made at various times by Sulka, Valstar, Burberry (the latter bought from Press when JFK was president) wrinkled. I was mistaken for Columbo on the streets of NYC (but I look a little like him(. Now happy with a Barbera raincoat with polyester (yes, and spelled right too).
The Keep Burberry British Campaign:
www.keepburberrybritish.com
spotted originally in this thread:
http://www.styleforum.net/showthread.php?t=28953
Any experience with Mackintosh anybody? I'm tempted each time I pass in Burlington Arcade, but the rubber coating thing worries me a bit, practicality and durability-wise...
I love raincoats (no, I'm neither a spy nor a flasher..:-); my favourite are a short vintage off white single breasted Aquascutum and a lightweight olive Watro, single breasted with belt. I use also a late 50s ink blue number, with a slight iridescent effect (tweed lined, with a lovely large embroidered inside label) and a short tan one (a bit frayed on the left cuff), also iridiscent, both single breasted.
Last edited by Daniele (2007-01-29 08:47:48)
Cording's rubber coated Mackintoshes have a certain 'rubbery' smell about them when warm. The fabric is slightly stiff too, not very drape-y.
Daniele,
Here's a link to a negative report on Mackintosh durability, from a Styleforum user:
http://styleforum.net/showthread.php?t=11160&highlight=MACKINTOSH+WEAR
The last Mackintosh I looked at (but did not buy) was on sale at Bergdorf. It barely touched the knee.
Regards,
Steven
P.S. Horace, thanks for the kind thought about adoption. My wife and I already have children from prior marriages but we'd consider a new "child" who could contribute substantial airline miles to the household and who is willing to housesit when we go to Australia late this year. New wardrobe (sadly) not included.
Last edited by stylestudent (2007-01-29 11:17:27)
I always liked the J Petterman Jessie James duster!
Just noticed this make in the window of a gents shop here in town I occasionally shop at :
http://www.grenfellgarments.com/Rainwear.html
As for rainwear I own myself : a Hugo Boss plum, fingertip length, lined raincoat and a Berghaus kagoul in bright red.......
The mac I saw was in a very handsome sort of light army green w/an orange tinge BTW....... nice.....
Last edited by Alex Roest (2007-01-31 05:35:26)
Hey, Marc: Allegri: very appealing.
Anybody know if Eric Clapton is still part-owner of Cordings? In the '90s he wore some pretty nice suits and seemed enthralled with fine menswear, but it seems to have been a pasing phase, though I could be wrong. Now it seems he's back to T-shirts and jeans. Still play a mean guitar, though.
Stylestudent, thankyou for the link. I feared something similar...
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/london/3528296.stm
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2004/08/02/nclap02.xml
Last edited by Marc Grayson (2007-02-02 01:31:49)
Oddly even my brother and I were approached by Cordings (along with I'm sure many, many others) to invest in the company.
They were linked to Hawes & Curtis too I think. The sales pitch was that they covered everything - H&C through the week and then Cordings for 'the weekend look'.
Terry Lean trivia: I'm actually sitting on a Brown tweed cushion made by Cordings. It was a shop fitting from their down stairs sofa (Green tweed) by the shoes. My sister-in-law persuaded them to sell it to her some time around '99 & then gave it to me for Christmas as a joke.
Very nice it is too - Rich brown herringbone with a subtle deep wine and mustard coloured windowpane over-check. Once upon a time they had suits in the same tweed too.