Barbour jacket
I'm in the process of purchasing my first Barbour jacket and I was informed by a friend that they shrink a little over time. I felt that perhaps he had enlarged a little over time and it my not be the jacket at fault. I didn't challenge him on this, not wanting to be in-polite. Can anyone confirm if i should be wary of jacket shrinkage?
Try on the Barbour over a sports coat or bulky sweater: I went up one size for theBarbour tofit properly.
It is cotton and if it is soaked, it may shrink but I've not noticed it.
Otherwise, I find that the coat wears clammy, is not particularly insultating and I wonder why it ever succeeded as an outdoors sporting coat....if I was in the market for such a coat again, I would check out Loro Piana's Horsey.
It is cotton and if it is soaked, it may shrink but I've not noticed it.
Otherwise, I find that the coat wears clammy, is not particularly insultating and I wonder why it ever succeeded as an outdoors sporting coat....if I was in the market for such a coat again, I would check out Loro Piana's Horsey.
Leyburn,I'm in the process of purchasing my first Barbour jacket and I was informed by a friend that they shrink a little over time. ......... Can anyone confirm if i should be wary of jacket shrinkage?
I have been wearing Barbour jackets since many years; they do not shrink over the time but,even with a proper and annualy based care ,they crease; in addition some little holes and tears ,after few years , start to affect the cotton tissue mainly in points of frictions such as the sleeves. In my opinion however such signs of wearing make these jackets more interesting as they give a beautiful vintage looking.
I have never noticed shrinkage. But you have to decide how you are going to wear it: they are sized to be worn by themselves. If you want to wear them over jackets, then you have to try them on until you find the size that fits. This is not obvious: I got a Cordura Barbour jacket that fits over a Barbour fleece jacket (I specifically made this request), and the thing is still not comfortable over a dress jacket though it is several sizes too large.
I have owned several for many years, and have even had to send off for re-proofing. I have never noticed any shrinkage. Perhaps the buddy that mention it has grown?
Thank you very much for your advice. I have purchased the jacket and did indeed opt for a size larger than my usual. I'm very pleased with it so far although the ravages of winter are not yet upon us! Apologies for my misspelling of Impolite in my original post, I think there must have been a little shrinkage in my brain on that particular day.
The Barbour worn over a fleece detachable lining is useful in winter when it snows and it is not very cold (which is usually true when it does snow). In cold weather however (below -1) it gets uncomfortably cold and rigid. Perhaps you live in a warm climate and have warm winters...
-
- Posts: 278
- Joined: Mon Oct 24, 2005 1:26 am
- Location: New York, NY
- Contact:
Don't know if it's an issue but you can get the sleeves shortened on the wax cotton jackets.
I also decided to go one size up and definitely needed the sleeves shortened a bit.
I also decided to go one size up and definitely needed the sleeves shortened a bit.
At first i thought of getting the sleeves shortened but as I have worn it the creasing seems to have raised them just enough. I'm not sure how this will work out in the long term but it is good to know that this is an option.
One of the reasons I purchased the jacket is because of the after sales service offered by Barbour.
One of the reasons I purchased the jacket is because of the after sales service offered by Barbour.
-
- Posts: 278
- Joined: Mon Oct 24, 2005 1:26 am
- Location: New York, NY
- Contact:
I took the jacket to the Peter Elliot Barbour store in NY - they never asked where I had bought it (not there) and I never pretended I got it there. They supposedly sent it to the service centerin Maine (I believe).brescd01 wrote:Cantagbrian, how and where do you get the sleeves shortened?
It's a standard repair option on the form available on their website so you could probably send it to Barbour directly if you didn't want to go through the PE Barbour store.
I have pretty extensive long term experience with a lot of Barbours. They won't shrink on their own, HOWEVER, if you send them in for factory reproofing, where there's a fair amount of heat applied to the entire jacket, there are reports that they do shrink up a tad bit. This seems to be a bigger problem for the New Zealand made Barbours than the English ones.
Something I never see weekenders do to their Barbours that shooters tend to do, is send the coat to Barbour to have all of the edges covered in leather piping. I have found that if you're hard on a post-1990 Barbour (when I roughly think quality dropped off a bit), you'll get a fair amount of fraying. The leather trim stops that, and actually looks pretty cool to boot.
Something I never see weekenders do to their Barbours that shooters tend to do, is send the coat to Barbour to have all of the edges covered in leather piping. I have found that if you're hard on a post-1990 Barbour (when I roughly think quality dropped off a bit), you'll get a fair amount of fraying. The leather trim stops that, and actually looks pretty cool to boot.
-
- Information
-
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 72 guests