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| The one my sister purchased was bright white and the hood was giant, I guess for a helmet to fit. I remember it being very thin. Dad told me that it wasn't meant for warmth. It was camo for the snow regions,
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| I had one, I think it was by Woolrich, called a 60/40. _ _______________________________ "Nature scares me" a quote by my friend Bob after a rough day at sea. |
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| Ebay has lots of vintage jackets and parkas.
End of Earth: 2 Miles Upper Peninsula: 4 Miles
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| 60/40 parkas was based around moisture wetting-out the shell's surface fabric and utilizing the surface water tension to maintain a degree of water-resistant integrity. The problem, besides carrying so much water on the jacket itself, was once you broke that water-tension, like with a backpack strap pushing onto the material, water would just pour-in. LL Bean, Eddie Bauer, REI, The North Face, Early Winters, Sierra Designs all had their versions of the 60/40. Today, it's more retro nostalgia as there's much better materials and textiles available. |
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| Herman's Sporting Goods in Tysons Corner sold a lot of parkas including the North Face which just like this one which I have: https://www.ebay.com/itm/146367036266They also carried a lot of Smith Wessons which you couldn't find any place else like M41, M29 and M629 when it first came out.
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| None of those are what I was remembering, The thing I am thinking of came from the army / Navy store and was cotton / canvas.
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Neck Ties, Hats and ammo brass, Never ,ever touch'em w/o asking first |
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| I still have one of what I believe you’re referring to: green by Holubar of Boulder, CO. It was my first coat that I regularly used for backpacking and back country hiking. I also often wore it when working. Its advantage was its multitude of pockets to carry lots of stuff. Its disadvantage was that all the pockets made it difficult to find things: “Now, where is that? I’m sure it’s in one of these pockets.” It was not, however, particularly waterproof and got replaced with a Gore-Tex version some years later.
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| quote: Originally posted by kkina: Oh, yeah! In the 70s everyone was wearing puffy jackets. I remember thinking they looked peculiar, although I may very well have worn one myself.
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| Yup. Holubar in Boulder (and I think they had other locations around CO). I had a cloth-reinforced down parka (bright orange) in about 1974. Loved that coat! When I graduated, I moved to LA and gave it to my brother who was a Denver fireman and mountainering and climber type. He said he only wore it when the temps on the mountain were -10 or colder, otherwise it was too warm. Incidentally, Holubar got sold, and eventually ended up rebranded as Northface.
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| quote: Originally posted by 41: Herman's Sporting Goods in Tysons Corner sold a lot of parkas including the North Face which just like this one which I have: https://www.ebay.com/itm/146367036266They also carried a lot of Smith Wessons which you couldn't find any place else like M41, M29 and M629 when it first came out.
Wrong garment. 60/40 mountain parka was not insulated, it was basically a flannel-lined field parka. Insulated coats, snorkel jackets' or, puffys are a different more specialized item. Sierra Designs is arguably the progenitor of the 60/40 Parka ...although I'd wager REI, The North Face or, Eddie Bauer likely had a similar, by the late-70's just about all those brands that catered to outdoor usage had a 60/40-type jacket. Holubar...there's a name I've not heard in a long-time, good heritage and epicenter of Colorado outdoors, whereas the others was either SF Bay Area or, Seattle-area. A good look of a 60/40 Parka would be what Robert DeNiro wore in The Deer Hunter and I believe John Belushi wore one in the underrated film Continental Divide |
| Posts: 15378 | Location: Wine Country | Registered: September 20, 2000 |  
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| quote: Originally posted by Blackmore: I had a medium blue one from a company called Snow Lion. Vintage ones from that brand are out there.
Snowlion was an outdoor equipment business started by Bill Simon. Simon is a seminal figure in the outdoor manufacturing world, largely responsible & influencial in the development of overseas manufacturing and the growth of many top brands today. quote: Originally posted by Reedman: Incidentally, Holubar got sold, and eventually ended up rebranded as Northface.
Ummm no. Holubar was purchased by The North Face when it was owned by Johnson Wax at the time. The business had been sold a few times, all the while expanding the number of locations; by the time The North Face purchased the rights from Johnson Wax I believe 1981, it was but a shell of what it was when the Holubar's owned it, and only the original Boulder location was its most valuable asset. |
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