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SB jacket in middling sheep

SB jacket in middling sheep

$852.00

Colours

ColorMiddling Sheep
Size

Soft and unstructured tailored jacket, made in London, with a sturdy (12oz) yet breathable worsted hopsack from West Yorkshire — woven with the wool of domestic-breed sheep, no less — and with dark horn buttons from the Cotswolds.

Last order for pre-Christmas delivery: 15th December for the UK, 8th December for the rest of the world.

The SB is a single-breasted tailored jacket. It has a two-button front, a slightly nipped waist, and a just-barely peaked lapel of moderate size. There's very little structure to be found here — it is foremost a light and casual jacket — but it has the proportions and the silhouette of a smart suit or sports jacket.

The SB is a single-breasted tailored jacket. It has a two-button front, a slightly nipped waist, and a just-barely peaked lapel of moderate size. There's very little structure to be found here — it is foremost a light and casual jacket — but it has the proportions and the silhouette of a smart suit or sports jacket.

There are three buttons at the cuff, with the buttonholes cut open. It is a working cuff, in other words, though has no quarrel whatsoever with cuffs that cannot work or do not work.

At the front of the jacket are two large patch pockets, which are strengthened with bar-tacks at the top corners. At the chest, meanwhile, on the left side as worn, there's another pocket — most notable for being a somewhat unorthdox upturned flap, and its corners, too, strengthened with little bar-tacks.

Some hand-sewing here. The chain-stitch below the button-hole helps hold in place a boutonnière (a flower, for instance). The criss-cross ("duck") stitch, meanwhile, holds together the lapel and the collar so that, over time, one doesn't flap around independently of the other. Helpful little hidden handiwork.

The jacket has an in-breast pocket — an internal chest pocket, that is, of the jetted variety — on both the left and right sides.

The jacket has a buggy lining, across the upper back, of smooth, slinky satin. Likewise the sleeves. The jacket thus slides on and off with ease. The lower regions are unlined. This is an unstructured and travel-friendly jacket, after all. The exposed seams are finished cleanly and carefully with cotton binding.

The cloth — made with the wool of British sheep — is a high-twist worsted, ergo springy, and with an open weave, ergo breathable. It is crisp and dry, and more coarse in texture than a bog-standard suiting cloth. Great for travelling, too, being as it has excellent fibre strength and doesn't much crease.

As worn

Him, here, is as standard a 38 as ever there was, with a height of 6ft 1in and a weight of 12 stone. He's wearing one size larger than his usual here — it's a size M, meant for a 40 chest — hence the more relaxed than usual fit.

Makers of

The jacket is made at an outerwear factory in London: the best, many agree, in the capital. The jacket is cut by the hands of a cutter with some 30 years in the trade, and sewn by one of four seamsters whose meticulousness and pursuit of perfection would be caricature were the end results not always so good.

Local production — this cloth is an exemplar of it. The wool which goes into the worsted comes from the backs of white-face Cheviot sheep in North Yorkshire, and is spun, washed, and woven at textile facilities, all within a small radius around the boundary North and West Yorkshire.

The horn buttons are cut, shaped, and polished by the last horn button-makers in Britain. Relocated from the Midlands to the Cotswolds, they continue a tradition going back to the 18th century."It is no easy task,"claimed William Hutton in 1780,"to enumerate the infinite diversity of buttons made in Birmingham."

So they say

I received the SB package in perfect order, and can't say how much I love the jacket. It fits perfectly. I like the cut and drape a lot. And it is gladly and surprisingly short. But, because of the the full cut, it can be worn with a bulky sweater underneath, which is just what I had hoped for.

So confided a gentleman about the Donegal tweed SB in May 2016.

Just wanted to let you know the SB in twill has arrived, and it is absolutely dashing — in an understated way.

Another acquire of an SB in Donegal tweed — defying seasonal norms in November of 2015.

I received my SB yesterday, and it by far exceeds my expectations. It's truly a fantastic piece of clothing.

Kind words from a gentleman who bought a cotton-drill version of the SB back in 2014.

I am very happy with the SB jacket. A somewhat "obscure object of desire" for me, perhaps, but I just had to have it. This desire now satisfied, I may not need to buy any new threads for a while, but when I do I'll look to you folks first.

His "object of desire" was the SB in a blue herringbone linen, acquired in May 2015.

Very pleased with my SB and thinking of buying another.

Encouraging words from a chap who bought a woollen SB in February of 2017.

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