2013 Autumn/Winter Pipeline
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Son of a bitch. My feckin wallet.
I am not down with all these anti-zipper freaks though.
I'm not sure why, but I just really am not a fan of them on most things. I feel like it breaks up an otherwise clean aesthetic and for me at least I'm gonna wear a hoodie when it's cold and if its not then no hoodie for me! I don't need the hybrid version offered by the zipper…. But then again I don't run the works right ?
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Don't you live in SF? That city and its microclimates is exactly why zip hoodies are nice IMO. Or it's cold out, but warm in the bar, etc… Also hate pulling things on and off over my head.
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Actually live Southern California and LA next year. I guess it does make sense to have something that can be a little more versatile through unzipping etc, but I mainly just like how cozy a nice pullover feels…
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Ooh Talon? Better than the ghetto aluminum one on the Strike Gold. Though the fleece makes up for it.
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Used to be Talon, is on the 05 (http://www.ironheart.co.uk/extinct/ihsw-05.html). It's the perfect hoodie IMO.
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@tmg:
Indigo dyed is ace, but thought Henley's had buttons?
ha, guess what…actually I've wanted to ask this in my original post, if the term "henley" was the right one to use for this type of product. deleted it though since I wasn't really sure if "henley" is the term used for something (in a similar fabric and) with two buttons
guess I need someone to clarify this!?
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From Wiki:
A henley shirt is a collarless men's pullover shirt, characterized by a 10-centimetre-long (3.9 in) placket beneath the round neckline, usually having 2–5 buttons. It essentially resembles a collarless polo shirt. The sleeves may be either short or long, and it can be made in almost any fabric, although cotton, cotton-polyester blends, and thermals are by far the most popular. Henley shirts are generally regarded as menswear, but women's versions have appeared as well.
They were so named because this particular style of shirt was the traditional uniform of rowers in the English town of Henley-on-Thames.[citation needed] Some crews still use this style as part of their uniform.
Originally quite popular in the early 1970s, Henley shirts have recently made a fashion comeback, especially in Western countries such as the United Kingdom, United States, Canada and Australia, but also in some East Asian countries such as Japan and Korea.In his biography of Ralph Lauren, the journalist Michael Gross quotes a New York merchant who recalled showing a vintage shirt to a Ralph Lauren buyer: "I showed this fellow underwear–-a three-button long-sleeve shirt by Johnstown Knitting Mills. He said, 'This is a new shirt.' That's where he got the idea for the Henley shirt."
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if it doesn't come in a 31" length, I don't see a reason not to go for it as well…
Its a thermal waffle shirt natural indigo dyed i guess
that was sth. I did know, but when us something called a henley and when not?
you called it a henley which it is not as a henley always has buttons and its collarless, therefore it is a thermal waffle shirt a yeah G putted the light on it dont worry brotha, lost in translation