So, in your opinion, how did the people in WW 2 wear their B3s? Right at the belt, above the belt, or 1-2" below the belt?
In the pictures I took, I was wearing a pair trousers with a 5.5" inch. Does this mean if I manage to find a pair of trousers with 7" fly, my fit will be "close enougn", ie.1.5"-2" below the belt line?The jacket is half way down what is probably a 7" trouser fly,that means the hem of the B-3 will be around 3" below his belt line which itself will be about level with the horizontal seam on the B-3 front
Hi
So this is my first B-3 jacket. Definitely is shorter than my usual leather jackets front length wise. Back length is OK.
I'm 188 cm or 6ft2, and the back length is 64 cm or 25.25 inches. The front length, as I measured, seems to be about 4-5 cm shorter than my usual leather jackets with the same back length.
I know the B3s are supposed to be worn short, but anyway, what do you all think?
Thanks for the help
Hey kowalski. Thanks for your reply. Indeed I sure have some long arms, which turns out to be a pain since my chest is a Medium at best (38"), so it's nigh imposibble to find any ready made leather jacket with the proper sleeve length for me.dragon ; if you had the length of the jacket adequate to the length of your hands, the jacket would cover your ass. I did not see such B3 personally
Quite dapper I'm sure!
The guy on the right, wouldn't you consider his jacket on the shortish side as well? It seels to be hanging just at his belt line, from what I see. The guy on the left definitely has a longer jacket.
Thanks for your insight Dmar, you clearly know a lot. It's very helpfulA higher rise trouser might pull off the illusion but that’s only if you hike them up like trousers used to be worn and do it all the time. I have high rise jeans I made but just can’t keep them up anymore so they settle down to the hips.
If you had the jacket custom built for your arm length, that’s the issue. It’s the proportions. The body slant isn’t a game changer to me. This is the problem chasing a “look”. If you make other compensations you will never be happy with the jacket IMO. You will always be self conscious and apologetic about any issues.
I have no beef with the jacket as you do appear to be so slim and have longer arms. You would need a completely custom fit B-3 IMO and that might not give you the look you want as it could drift too far from the wartime factory options. Look for some pics of tall guys in B-3s during the war and see what looks you find. Members here likely have some saved.
You are quickly going down the rabbit hole of needing the arms just so long and the waist exactly X inches over the belt, and so forth. Even when we get the initial fit acceptable often once wrinkles form and the jacket breaks in it will take yet another set that we may not prefer. Originals had no such tailoring choices so the look we often like was complete happenstance.
JMO,
Dave
Thanks Ken.The jacket tilts to the back, and the body is too short,the relationship between the sleeve and the body lengths makes that obvious
The thing is, I thought the back length was like a basic unit to determine the jacket's BACK and FRONT length at the same time. Since most of the time leather jacket makers don't really tell you the value of the front. When you look at jackets on websites, they only ask you to measure your back length and work it out from there. Or most leather jacket sellers only tell you the back length of the jacket, never the front. So I assumed that if I asked them to lengthen the back by 3 cm, the front should be lengthened in the same propotion so as to make the jacket appear normal. That's what I assumed anyway. It makes no sense to just add some length to the back but leave the front as stock... since that would ruin the jacket's propotions.Well, didn't you say you had them add to the back and the sleeves 3cm? That is what would give it the tilted appearance. Again, I'm not sure how to guide the chase other than try a basic stock sized one on. Surely your arms will stick out unless you upsize completely. B-3s, and many WWII era garments, are not "active wear" and therefore don't stretch or adapt to much more than keeping one warm. Not criticizing in any way here but perhaps a B-3 in a proportioned fit are just not in your future. If anyone, Ken could offer some tips in maybe a slimmed down pattern?
Dave