Cas City Forum Hall & CAS-L
Special Interests - Groups & Societies => The Barracks => Topic started by: Major 2 on February 26, 2018, 09:10:36 AM
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primarily, the question is the weight of the fabric
I note River Junction offers 3 fabrics ( cotton , cotton flannel ( I believe ) and wool....
I purchased the wool and got a very nice product in light(med) 8oz/yd weave ....
I also have a 10-11.9 oz/yd² shirt .... This not quite a heavy a the CW/Indian war Sack coats....
Both shirts are very well made, but was there a weight fabric regulation ?
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no clue but just got some wm draper wool flannel 11.5 oz in navy blue a good friend will sew 2 shirts for me one with pocket flips ala rough riders and one without
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primarily, the question is the weight of the fabric ... but was there a weight fabric regulation ?
Yes,
"Specifications for Dark-blue Wool Shirting and Cape Lining Flannel
To be fifty-four (54) inches, or 6/4 wide and to be made of pure long-staple American fleece wool, not less than one-half blood, free from shoddy, flocks, or other impurities, and to weigh not less than ten (10) ounces to the linear yard.
To be twilled and the nap very lightly slightly raised; to contain not less than fifty-six (56) threads of warp and fourty-eight (48) threads of filling in each square inch, and to be capable of sustaining a strain of not less than twenty-six (26) pounds to the inch in width of filling, tested in the piece.
The colors to be dark-blue...of the standard shades, and to be dyed with fast colors. The blue to be dyed in the wool with pure indigo.
Adopted June 10 1889..."
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How cool is that, perhaps I should get some more of the fabric to line the cape of my surtout
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How cool is that, perhaps I should get some more of the fabric to line the cape of my surtout
Help me remember, is your great coat the infantry version? If so the blue would be correct as long as it isn't the CW model (their capes were unlined), but I omitted the line about the other colors for other branches. Do you need me to post that line as well?
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"...to weigh not less than ten (10) ounces to the linear yard"
very cool....well not really :-\ come to think of it
So the heaver weight shirt is right ..and the 8 oz will be comfortable in warmer months
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I have the River Junction shirt too and it is very comfortable. The weave is nice and soft.
I also have a 100% correct M-1874 grey shirt. (off the top of my head I don't recall the manufacturer) It's material is quite a bit heavier and coarser. I would be willing to guess that it's weave is closer to the correct weave for the later dark-blue shirts as well
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I thought I had the lady make it like the 1872 coat but is actually a double breasted cw cavalry coat in Dark Blue with 2 row captain sleeve knots. Probably should leave it unlined or put on a whole lot more buttons
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Hi
I have a Civil War era Navy Blue Wool Shirt with two pockets, a WPG 1883 Service Shirt in Wool and a Coon Creek Old West Cotton Service Shirt. I plan on getting a second blue shirt from Coon Creek and one or two of the Punitive Expedition era shirts from them as well. The wool was really great for the 2017 Muster though, windy on top of a Nebraska hill ain't exactly the South Pacific.
Later
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Has anyone here bought the shirt from What Price Glory? If so, what are your thoughts? (I would consider it over River Junction just because they have it in stock. River Junction says four to six weeks.)
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Hi
I wore the WPG wool shirt at the 2017 Muster. It's warm, held up, and was a true size 48. I wear a 17.5x35 shirt and it fit.
Later
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How was the weight of the wool? Is it shirting fabric, or is it more like the coat fabric?
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I'm not sure I've handled shirting fabric, but it's lighter than the Union Sack coat I have, lighter than the old Rebel shell jacket I have. I think it's like the two CD Jarnigan shirts I have, but its been a while. I've considered getting a Cavalry 1882 from WPG, but don't need another wool shirt.
Later