Thanks for the update. It seems like it's hard to find info in English 
about Post O'alls. 

I hear you with the sleeves (and fit in general). That vintage fit can look 
strange, especially if you're tall and skinny.

Brad
Queens

On Thursday, April 2, 2020 at 11:42:17 AM UTC-4, Michael Baquerizo wrote:
>
> @brad
>
> Mostly correct. Takeshi of Post O'alls moved to Japan and along with it 
> went his production. He has very high standards and labored to find the 
> right place to do it and so it should be on par with the US product.
>
> With that being said, there are certain qualities he prefers that might 
> not mesh well with the masses (not that RBW Owner's are the masses). Mostly 
> those are cotton threads (which shrink as you would expect cotton to, thus 
> making the garments warp in weird ways all throughout and are more 
> expensive) and typically shorter sleeves akin to older work shirts where 
> ppl feared getting sleeves caught in machinery. 
>
>
>
> On Sunday, March 29, 2020 at 4:09:03 PM UTC-4, Brad wrote:
>>
>> There are a handful of small companies out there making reproduction 
>> vintage workwear. 
>>
>> Check out:  Left Field, Post Overalls, Engineered Garments, etc. (There's 
>> also Iron Heart, which is made in Japan.)l
>>
>> They manufacture domestically and use high-quality materials. And they're 
>> expensive enough that they make you realize what a good deal Riv's MUSA 
>> gear is. I'm far from an expert on this, but it's my understanding that a 
>> lot of these companies make clothes for the Japanese market. There's a 
>> strong demand there for vintage US workwear. 
>>
>> One of the companies (I think it's Post Overalls) is owned by a Japanese 
>> man who studied fashion production management in the States. His clothes 
>> are made with old machines from defunct factories in the US because 
>> collectors can tell the difference in the stitches made with new machines 
>> and old machines. You can really go down the rabbit hole with this stuff!
>>
>> Brad
>> Queens
>>
>>
>>
>> On Friday, March 27, 2020 at 1:54:11 PM UTC-4, Jay Lonner wrote:
>>>
>>> I just pulled my trusty MUSA blue chambray shirt out of the wash and it 
>>> is on its last legs, so to speak - significant fraying at the cuffs and 
>>> collar, worn elbows, missing buttons. I happened to get Grant on the phone 
>>> yesterday during a call to HQ on an unrelated matter, and when I pivoted to 
>>> this topic he indicated that new ones aren't in the pipeline. Any 
>>> suggestions on where to source a replacement that checks many/most of the 
>>> boxes of the original? There are commodity-grade options available from the 
>>> usual suspects (Carhartt, Duluth Trading, etc.) but I really love the 
>>> synergy of that supple Japanese chambray while supporting living wage 
>>> domestic craftspeople.
>>>
>>> Alternatively, does anyone have the genuine article for sale in size XL?
>>>
>>> Jay Lonner
>>> Bellingham, WA
>>>
>>

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