Hi,
got back from the US recently where I managed to visit Gettysburg and view some very nice reproduction Peter Tait jackets at CJ Daley's, also a County Cloth sample next door at a shop called 'Needle and Thread's' - and bumped into Jim Warehime wearing his own (makes for S & S, made one for Les Jensen). All great looking pieces but I confess I was a little taken aback at the colours of these jackets - all significantly lighter and more blue than I had considered a Tait to be from looking at some originals (on the Internet) and of course in my copy of 'Echoes of Glory' - my impression of Tait's being a darker grey-blue. Using the search function I have come across a comment from the Richmond Depot that one original was originally a brighter more blue-grey than the current grey-blue. Can anyone confirm that this is simply a chemical process as the dyes have aged/ accumulated dirt. Are all surviving examples darker and more grey looking when seen 'in the flesh' under reasonable lighting conditions? I was wondering if anyone knows if any have survived with their original brighter blue - or have researchers looked inside the internal seams etc to gauge the original colour (less affected by sunlight/ dirt) ? A further thought - are the photos in Echoes of Glory (of the Gouge, Duncan jackets) misleading?
Regards, Paul Jonsson. (England, UK)
got back from the US recently where I managed to visit Gettysburg and view some very nice reproduction Peter Tait jackets at CJ Daley's, also a County Cloth sample next door at a shop called 'Needle and Thread's' - and bumped into Jim Warehime wearing his own (makes for S & S, made one for Les Jensen). All great looking pieces but I confess I was a little taken aback at the colours of these jackets - all significantly lighter and more blue than I had considered a Tait to be from looking at some originals (on the Internet) and of course in my copy of 'Echoes of Glory' - my impression of Tait's being a darker grey-blue. Using the search function I have come across a comment from the Richmond Depot that one original was originally a brighter more blue-grey than the current grey-blue. Can anyone confirm that this is simply a chemical process as the dyes have aged/ accumulated dirt. Are all surviving examples darker and more grey looking when seen 'in the flesh' under reasonable lighting conditions? I was wondering if anyone knows if any have survived with their original brighter blue - or have researchers looked inside the internal seams etc to gauge the original colour (less affected by sunlight/ dirt) ? A further thought - are the photos in Echoes of Glory (of the Gouge, Duncan jackets) misleading?
Regards, Paul Jonsson. (England, UK)
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