The Real McCoys
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and you are both.
I'm really surprised you even answered -
thx mclain I was only able to do it in German due to my settings, thanx
Would you be so kind to send me this as pm! Thx. A.!
Enjoy ya addiction!
Hi A i can do that for u during the day. I find the English translated version a bit better than the German one, it reads somehow better imo
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And to Quote our fellow Sugar Mountain few pages back with nice info
@Sugar:
Far as I know, the two companies are completely separate now. I have also chatted with the guys at Take5 about the same subject! (I think my wife was reading Lightning in the corner ;))
@Sugar:
A little more info… Toys McCoy is run by Hiroshi Okamoto (the guy on the right in the pic below). He split with the McCoys that came to be owned by Hitoshi Tsujimoto of NYLON in the 1990s as I understand it. Toys McCoy sub brands include McHill, the Steve McQueen line and Buco.
And an interesting blog entry:
The McCoys at this point were perhaps the most relevant vintage replica company anywhere in the world. There were others however that sat on the peripherals that were equally proficient like Pherrows and Buzz Rickson and even the original conception of Evis produced some amazingly beautiful garments. These companies were everything that I came to associate with integrity and authenticity and for many years I was a die hard customer. Sometime during the 2000's I began to feel uneasy about many of these Japanese companies and the direction that they were taking or not taking as the case may have been. The McCoys underwent a strange break up of partnerships that is forever difficult to understand unless you are an insider and rumours ran amok that the president had squandered the profits on ridiculous things including a B-17 bomber. As it happened a new Real McCoys / Toys McCoys emerged but it was different with Hiroshi Okamoto at the helm gone was the feeling of ultra authenticity and stripped down military utilitarianism and what replaced it was an air of safeness, a cutesy world of Disney characters and the over exploited Felix the Cat icon that smacked of the same Japanese-ness that exploits Hello Kitty or Captain Santa, essentially I felt the Real McCoys had become the Cockpit, over indulgent, over detailed and overpriced.
http://papanuisays.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/critiquing-market-lets-be-honest.html
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There was also the (ugly?) split between the JP and NZ RMC branches. The latter markets their jackets now in Japan as The Few, though globally as RMC NZ.
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and Rainbow County is the name of the official UES web shop
too off-topic? -
Yes, indeed
But this quote is fucking awesome:
@superfuzz:"the president had squandered the profits on ridiculous things including a B-17 bomber"!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Hello, I've been reading the forum for a quite long time but this is my first ever post. Hopefully the first of many. I've found a lot of really useful info about RMC here so thanks to all who contribute.
What I'd like is a little bit of advice and opinion about the fit of an N-1 I've just bought. I'm not 100% convinced on the sizing at the moment. Particularly the body/arm lengths. I've read elsewhere that the shoulders will give a little with wear and that the alpaca will flatten down so really not sure what to do with regards to returning and sizing up or sticking with what I have.
I'm 6'1" and have a 38. Opinions/constructive feedback all greatly received. Apologies for the poor quality photo!
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Sounds like I need to fly to Tokyo soon.
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I would recommend changing to size 40. The sleeves and body look short and it looks like you don't have a lot of room the shoulders.
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I really Iike that fit but I do like jackets/shirts on the shorter side. What are you hesitant about? Does the chest feel tight at all or reasonably loose? From what I can see it all looks really good and if the chest and shoulders are comfortable then I personally feel that a 40 might look a little sloppy.