Campus Sportswear horsehide leather jacket

http://www.ebay.com/itm/281154565976
This jacket was made in the late ’40s-mid 1950s timeframe by Campus Sportswear. It is made of horsehide in a classic half-belt utility jacket design that was popular from the 1930s-1950s. This one brings a bit of a ’50s twist to the design in the form of the swooping stitching/welt running up the front of the jacket. The jacket has slash handwarmer pockets, a zipped breast pocket, and adjuster belts on the sides. It has a brass Talon zipper of the design introduced in the late 1940s. The jacket has a quilted lining.

Chest (pit to pit): 22-1/2″
Shoulder to shoulder: 17-1/2″
Sleeve (shoulder to cuff): 23-1/2″
Length: 25″

 photo IMG_7447.jpg

 photo IMG_7448.jpg

 photo IMG_7449.jpg

 photo IMG_7450.jpg

 photo IMG_7452.jpg

 photo IMG_7453.jpg

 photo IMG_7454.jpg

Allied Clothiers mustard colored jacket

Also see: https://vintagehaberdashers.com/2012/05/23/1950s-allied-clothiers-cotton-ricky-jacket/

http://www.ebay.com/itm/281142179139
This vintage sportswear jacket was made in the early to mid 1950s by Allied Clothiers. It is made of lightweight mustard colored cotton, with side adjuster belts, action pleated shoulders and handwarmer pockets. The front does up with a rare Talon zipper variant, in aluminum with a 1953 patented E-Z Zip-Tab.

Chest (pit to pit): 21″
Shoulder to shoulder: 17″
Sleeve (shoulder to cuff): 22-1/2″
Length: 26″

 photo IMG_0361.jpg

 photo IMG_0374.jpg

 photo IMG_0362.jpg

 photo IMG_0363.jpg

 photo IMG_0364.jpg

 photo IMG_0375.jpg

AT Hendrick 1940s buckskin half-belt leather jacket

http://www.ebay.com/itm/271244469421
This vintage leather jacket was made in the 1940s by A.T. Hendrick. It is made of soft, high quality buckskin leather, in a button front waist-length half-belt style. The buttons are leather “football” knot style. It has fancy bellows patch pockets, and an action back. The chest pocket has a Talon chain zipper of the type used in the 1940s.

A bit about the maker: Allie T. Hendricks was born on January 27, 1896. He worked as a clothes cleaner through the 1920s and into the 1930s. In 1936, he opened his own tailor shop in the one bedroom house at 1796 Trenton St., Denver, CO which he shared with his wife, Marie. Early directory listings indicate he produced leather jackets exclusively. Later ones use the broader term “leather goods”. Like many small western leather shops, it seems he specialized in buckskin.
There is a bit of confusion over the name – his own labels read “AT Hendrick” (no S), but his directory listings and social security records spell it “Hendricks”. He died in early 1981, aged 84.

Chest: 21″ (doubled = 42″)
Shoulder to Shoulder: 17″
Sleeve (shoulder to cuff): 25-1/2″
Length: 27″

 photo IMG_2002.jpg

 photo IMG_2004.jpg

 photo IMG_2005.jpg

 photo IMG_2006.jpg

 photo IMG_2007.jpg

 photo IMG_2008.jpg

 photo IMG_2009.jpg

 photo IMG_2010.jpg

 photo IMG_2011.jpg

1939

 photo 193901-1.jpeg

The home where Hendricks produced his leather jackets

 photo house-1.jpeg

Pal O’Mine hair on leather jacket

http://www.ebay.com/itm/271235564659
This vintage leather jacket was made by the Fleecy Mfg. Co of Chicago, IL, under the Pal-O’Mine Sportswear label. It is a classic utility jacket style, with a twist. It has a shirt style collar, a brass Talon zipper, and slash handwarmer pockets. The shoulders are trimmed with hair-on cowhide for that western flair. It appears that the edges of the pockets and the shoulder yokes once had fringed trim, but that the original owner removed it.The size and styling make me think this was probably marketed at the young men’s demographic.

Chest: 19″
Sleeve: 22-1/2″
Shoulder to Shoulder: 15″
Length: 26″

 photo IMG_0067.jpg

 photo IMG_0327.jpg

 photo IMG_0073.jpg

 photo IMG_0072.jpg

 photo IMG_0074.jpg

 photo IMG_0333.jpg

Rodeo Sport Togs lace up suede shirt

http://www.ebay.com/itm/281132682146
This vintage shirt jacket was made by the Seattle Woolen Co. under the Rodeo Sport Togs label. It has a lace-up front, a shirt cut, and a yoked back. There is a flap inside (like a gas-flap on WWII shirts) to back the lace-up portion. The lace is elasticized to make putting the shirt on easier.

Chest (pit to pit): 21″
Shoulder to Shoulder: 17″
Sleeve (shoulder to cuff): 25″
Length: 25″

 photo IMG_0088.jpg

 photo IMG_0322.jpg

 photo IMG_0323.jpg

 photo IMG_0324.jpg

 photo IMG_0326.jpg

Los Angeles Sportogs leather western shirt

http://www.ebay.com/itm/281132689425
This vintage leather shirt jacket was made in California by Los Angeles Sportogs. It is an unusual style, a western pearl-snap shirt, but instead of gabardine, it is made out of white leather, with hair-on cowhide trip on the yokes, pockets, and cuffs. I particularly like the broad arrow reinforcements at the edges of the “smile” pockets. The back of the shirt-jacket has an unusual cutaway. Snaps are United Carr / DOT snapper.

Chest (pit to pit): 20″
Shoulder to shoulder: 18″
Sleeve (shoulder to cuff): 26
Length: 26-1/2″

 photo IMG_0077.jpg

 photo IMG_0339.jpg

 photo IMG_0336.jpg

 photo IMG_0337.jpg

 photo IMG_0338.jpg

 photo IMG_0081.jpg

 photo IMG_0083.jpg

1950s / 1960s Ocean Champion swimsuit

http://www.ebay.com/itm/271234498990
This vintage swimsuit was made in the 1950s or 1960s by Ocean Champion. Ocean Champion was one of the first companies to move away from wool and lastex blends, and into modern materials. This box is slightly later than the other pair I’m listing, rephrased to read “The Choice of World Champions” instead of “Chosen by the U.S. Olympic Team”. The pattern and model is the same.
As the box says, the suit is two independent layers, a trunk within a trunk. At this point, the manufacturer Ocean Pool Supply Co., was headquartered in Huntington Station, Long Island, NY.

Waist (unstretched): 13″ (doubled = 26″)
Waist (stretched): 17″ (doubled = 34″)
Rise: 14-1/2″
Side Seam: 10″

 photo IMG_0270.jpg

 photo IMG_0271.jpg

 photo IMG_0272.jpg

 photo IMG_0273.jpg

 photo IMG_0274.jpg

 photo IMG_0275-1.jpg

 photo IMG_0276.jpg

 photo IMG_0277.jpg

1950s Ocean Champion swimsuit

http://www.ebay.com/itm/271234495023
This vintage swimsuit was made in the 1950s by Ocean Champion. Ocean Champion was one of the first companies to move away from wool and lastex blends, and into modern materials. At the point this suit was made, Ocean Champion was the official suit of the United States Men’s and Women’s Swimming and Water Polo Olympic teams.
As the box says, the suit is two independent layers, a trunk within a trunk. At this point, the manufacturer Ocean Pool Supply Co., was headquartered at 155 W. 23rd St., NYC.

Waist (unstretched): 13-1/2″ (doubled = 27″)
Waist (stretched): 17″ (doubled = 34″)
Rise: 14″
Side Seam: 10″

 photo IMG_0260.jpg

 photo IMG_0261.jpg

 photo IMG_0263.jpg

 photo IMG_0264.jpg

 photo IMG_0265.jpg

 photo IMG_0266.jpg

 photo IMG_0267.jpg

 photo IMG_0269.jpg

Deadstock Wigwam Award Sweater

http://www.ebay.com/itm/281130733154
This vintage sweater was made by the Wigwam Hand Knit Hosiery Company of Sheboygan, Wisconsin for Marvin Goetsch. It has his name chain-stitched on a felt patch under the hem. Despite this, it is still neatly folded in the original store box, and appears to have never been worn. The sweater is a rich blue wool.

Chest (pit to pit, unstretched): 19″ (doubled = 38″)
Chest (pit to pit, stretched): 26″ (doubled = 52″)
Sleeve (shoulder to cuff, cuffed): 22″
Sleeve (shoulder to cuff, uncuffed): 25″
Shoulder to Shoulder: 17″
Length: 29″

 photo IMG_1275.jpg

 photo IMG_1277.jpg

 photo IMG_1279.jpg

 photo IMG_1281.jpg

 photo IMG_1282.jpg

 photo IMG_1284.jpg

 photo IMG_1285.jpg

 photo IMG_1287.jpg