IH-526J-DD - Double Duck Type III Jacket
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I've had this beauty for a year now but I'm making very slow progress breaking it in. The main reason being that our weather doesn't allow much jacket use, but the second reason being that the super stiff DD fabric gives me hell at that neck and wrist areas where the rubbing happens. My wrist area gets pretty raw when I ride the motorcycle with all the wind-induced rubbing. I've never rinsed nor washed mine.
Wondering whether anyone else has the same issues and sorted it out? Is it purely a case of grinding through this phase?
At any rate, I love the crunchy nature of DD!
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I've had this beauty for a year now but I'm making very slow progress breaking it in. The main reason being that our weather doesn't allow much jacket use, but the second reason being that the super stiff DD fabric gives me hell at that neck and wrist areas where the rubbing happens. My wrist area gets pretty raw when I ride the motorcycle with all the wind-induced rubbing. I've never rinsed nor washed mine.
Wondering whether anyone else has the same issues and sorted it out? Is it purely a case of grinding through this phase?
At any rate, I love the crunchy nature of DD!
Mine is wicked crunchy and tough, too. This isn't the first jacket to leave the inside of my elbows all cut up, and I hope it won't be the last
I do assume it will break in and soften up a bit over time. Try to enjoy the ride
Why exactly is this jacket so much tougher than other duck, like the 2526J for instance?
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It's the starch and the indigo…...
Oh, didn't realize this one was starched. That explains a lot! Was this jacket starched just for aesthetics or is there another reason to make it so crispy?
Starch is used a lot as a sizing agent during weaving, not for aesthetics. It strengthens the cotton yarn making it less likely to break during the weaving process, which would necessitate stopping the loom and resetting the process. I don’t know for sure but I’d imagine this would be more of an issue with duck than denim.
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A sizing agent is used in all denims and ducks we make, a broken warp is an expensive thing in terms of loom stoppage time plus when the loom is restarted, the loom takes a little time to get back to steady state, so a few inches of fabric remain unusable. Rope dyed indigo is stiff, remember, the dye does not penetrate the yarn, it oxidises on the surface….
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Thanks for the lesson! I just read a little more about rope dyed indigo.
At the risk of annoying you with many questions, so is the DD more stiff because it had indigo rope dyed warp and weft (hence the double duck) while the brown duck is less stiff because only either the warp or weft are rope dyed?
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^ I love this image of you philosophising in your double double type lll
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^ I love this image of you philosophising in your double double type lll
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In case someone doesn't see in the other place where I posted a shot with this backdrop, my brother was in town and brought a massive setup to photograph my cats. He had lighting set up in some specific way, and he had me do a specific pose that he had in mind that would work best for the lighting.
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This is starting to get some pretty cool fading.
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Your jacket is progressing beautifully @cander49
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Nice update @cander49, that jacket is one of a kind.
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