Jennison
Well-Known Member
I bought my first A-2 back in 1986/87, an Avirex from the Cockpit catalog. I opted for the $45 hand-painted AAF "decal" on the shoulder along with "Army Air Force" under it. The letters weren't bad for being hand painted, and they even looked decal-ish from 5 feet away. I went to a local leather worker and had him make a name tag for me (I didn't know of anyone making and selling those otherwise). I wore the jacket with pride for years. It wasn't until long after that I realized the artist left the "s" off of "Forces" and the jacket itself wasn't the spot-on repro of an A-2 that the catalogue said it was. Still, it reminded me of good times over the years and became quite special. Plus, I was wearing this jacket with the AAF insignia and leather-strip name tag at a time I when such a combo wasn't exactly falling from the trees. Now that I've discovered what a true A-2 should look like, I'm not inclined to relegate the Avirex to my closet. So, I sent it down to Steve Sellers and told him to send me back the closest thing he could to a Cable Raincoat #23382 that went through a Depot Re-dye. Steve took up the challange, both of us aware of the fact that the jacket would be a very loose Cable Raincoat A-2 (so for those of you who'll be inclined to point out the flaws, there's no need as I know there are many).
What Steve did: 1) Replaced the lining the a more correct mustard-brown shade ( all cotton of course, as opposed to the Avirex blend) and covered the inside collar snap grommet with lining material ; 2) got rid of the loop hanger and added a leather strip hanger with the correct box stiching; 3) shortened the sleeves an inch (I'm no fan of tunneling); 4) replaced the knits with russets ones (all wool and not the Avirex blend knits that pill); 5) replaced the Scovill zipper (actually a high quality American zipper) with a correct Conmar one by taking the Conmar parts and transplating them onto the existing tape; 6) shortened the collar by about an inch; 7) replaced weird collar hooks with correct copies (only my Avirex seemed to have strange hooks, kinda like they ran out of the A-2 ones and found a couple in Jeff's granny's sewing box); 8) got rid of an annoying aspect where the jacket would tend to curl outward on one side of the front; and finally, added an inspection stamp. The stamp blew my mind--why? Steve drew it on the liner freehand, no stamp.
We sure had fun with the project. I say "we" because Steve kept me relevant by showing me the steps and asking if I wanted this or that. He won't just plow ahead with a detail if he's not sure that's exactly what you want. He'd ask me, every time. The guy is a true gem.
The first photo is the 1987 Avirex in its original configuration. The rest is Steve's work. My apologies for only 6 photos. I think you'll get the idea.
What Steve did: 1) Replaced the lining the a more correct mustard-brown shade ( all cotton of course, as opposed to the Avirex blend) and covered the inside collar snap grommet with lining material ; 2) got rid of the loop hanger and added a leather strip hanger with the correct box stiching; 3) shortened the sleeves an inch (I'm no fan of tunneling); 4) replaced the knits with russets ones (all wool and not the Avirex blend knits that pill); 5) replaced the Scovill zipper (actually a high quality American zipper) with a correct Conmar one by taking the Conmar parts and transplating them onto the existing tape; 6) shortened the collar by about an inch; 7) replaced weird collar hooks with correct copies (only my Avirex seemed to have strange hooks, kinda like they ran out of the A-2 ones and found a couple in Jeff's granny's sewing box); 8) got rid of an annoying aspect where the jacket would tend to curl outward on one side of the front; and finally, added an inspection stamp. The stamp blew my mind--why? Steve drew it on the liner freehand, no stamp.
We sure had fun with the project. I say "we" because Steve kept me relevant by showing me the steps and asking if I wanted this or that. He won't just plow ahead with a detail if he's not sure that's exactly what you want. He'd ask me, every time. The guy is a true gem.
The first photo is the 1987 Avirex in its original configuration. The rest is Steve's work. My apologies for only 6 photos. I think you'll get the idea.
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