Leather jacket is a long coat jacket usually worn over clothes or other clothing, and made of tanned leather from various animals. Leather materials are usually dyed black, or various shades of brown, but a wide range of colors is possible. Leather jackets can be designed for many purposes, and special styles have been linked to subcultures such as greasers, rednecks, cowboys, motorcyclists, military aviators, mobsters, police, secret agents, and musical subcultures (punk, goths, metalheads, rivetheads), which have been wearing clothes for protective or fashionable reasons, and occasionally to create a potentially intimidating appearance. National Leather Jacket Day occurs every June 14 since Hell's Angels proposed the idea in 1975.
Most modern leather jackets are manufactured in Pakistan, India, Canada, Mexico, and the United States, using the remaining leather from the meat industry. Cloths that simulate skins such as polyurethane or PVC are used as an alternative to the skin of concealment of native animals depending on the needs of the wearer as those who pursue a vegan lifestyle or for economic reasons because synthetic fibers tend to be cheaper than genuine leather.
Video Leather jacket
History
In the early 1900s aviators and military personnel wore brown leather flight jackets. During the Second World War, clothing became known as a "bomb bomb" and was so isolated and precious to their warmth. The jacket is often part of a uniform uniform as a whole that is intended to protect the bomber pilots from exposure to extreme climatic conditions found at altitude, and occasionally insert sheepskin, using intact feathers on the inside for warmth.
The Russian Bolsheviks generally wore leather jackets, which became a fake uniform for the commissars during the Russian Civil War, and later for the Cheka members. Yakov Sverdlov is suspected of starting this practice.
Maps Leather jacket
Raw materials
Antelope, deer skin, sheepskin, sheepskin and cowhide are the most commonly used leather for making leather jackets. As soon as the skin is removed from the animal in the meat processing plant, it is cooled, salted, or packed in a salt water barrel. It is then sent to the tannery where the skin undergoes a series of processes designed to preserve and soften the skin. Sewing materials such as yarn, coating, seam tape, buttons, buttons and zippers are generally purchased from outside vendors and stored in a garment factory.
Popularity
In the second half of the 20th century, leather jackets - in various forms - achieved iconic status and public acceptance through an inseparable relationship with Hollywood. Such jackets were popularized by many stars in the 1940s and 1950s, including actor Jimmy Stewart in the movie Night Passage (1957), who had actually ordered the US bomber squadron during World War II. The brown leather jacket has become part of the wardrobe for Hollywood adventurers, from Gary Cooper in "For Whom the Bell Tolls" to Harrison Ford in the Indiana Jones film series.
The leather jacket can be used to form characters, providing the essential ingredients used to determine the essence of 'cool'. Key examples include the Perfecto motorcycle jacket worn by Johnny Strabler from Marlon Brando in The Wild One (1953), Honor Blackman as Cathy Gale on The Avengers, and Michael Pare on < i> Eddie and the Cruisers duo (1983 and 1989). Thus, all this served to popularize leather jackets to American and British youths from the "subculture grease" of the 1950s and early 1960s. Then the subculture depiction is seen through The Fonz of the Happy Days television series, which was produced in the 1970s and 1980s, but shows life in the 1950s and 1960s (Fonzie leather jackets now placed at the Smithsonian Institution), and in the movie duo Eddie and the Cruisers and Grease . The flight jacket, too (sometimes with fur collar, as seen in Top Gun movies (1986), has remained fashionable for decades.
Popular culture
There are many more examples of iconic leather jackets worn in popular culture, such as Schott Perfecto worn by the T-800 character The Terminator films and longer trench long styling styles worn by action heroes like Steven Seagal, and Keanu Reeves and Laurence Fishburne in movie The Matrix, or by Richard Gibson as Herr Otto Flick on Allo 'Allo's television sitcom' Allo! .
Another example is the leather jacket worn by Brad Pitt at the Fight Club , where the antagonist Tyler Durden is constantly appearing with different variations of his red leather jacket. Other famous leather jacket icons include those worn by members of the Black Panthers in the 1960s and 1970s, the Ramones that made it a trend in the punk subculture, members of the heavy metal subculture, etc.
In the most popular cultural examples, the jackets were worn by people who cultivated intimidating and potentially violent or revolting images. The brown leather jacket in particular has become very popular with the image and culture of Brit Pop and Indie and is famously worn by the likes of Kelly Jones of Stereophonics. The Punk culture also "wraps" leather jackets with accessories such as chains, buttons, pieces, and sketch designs. Many "Metal Heads" go with Judas Priest look (black leather jacket, black leather pants, chain, and many metal buttons).
As a safety equipment
There is a substantial difference between a leather jacket made for fashion, and which is used for protection, such as personal protective equipment for motorcycles. Leather jackets designed for protective use are safety equipment and heavier, thicker, and sometimes even equipped with armor, so they are a practical clothing item regardless of the symbolism embedded in it by popular culture. Leather jackets designed specifically for fashion purposes will not protect much in motorcycle accidents because of the construction of a thin jacket. Motorcycle jackets often have larger zips, pockets and weather closures, high collars, and are laid out longer in the rear than front to protect the rider's kidneys from the cold while the rider is hunched over a motorcycle.
References
4. Lewis Leathers UK leather jacket manufacturer founded in the late 19th century.
Source of the article : Wikipedia