IHSH-68-ind - 12oz Wabash Work Shirt - Indigo
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@Alex cheers and fair nuff, when’s the 266 restocking in that case…
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@Oaktavia yeah man I tend to agree actually, just want a 12oz indigo wabby work shirt
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@LewisStonehouse March
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@AdamJ cheers dude, that works out pretty well
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@Aetas the woven pinstripe is one of my favorites and one of the few westerns I have
It's so subtle as to be unnoticeable and my wife, an accomplished sewer herself, remarked on the cloth and the build quality I remember thinking I've never seen material like this, who does this kind of work? -
@Aetas the woven pinstripe is one of my favorites…..thinking I've never seen material like this, who does this kind of work?
Thanks @steelworker @Oaktavia
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One thing that I am not sure I have articulated well enough, is that our Wabash is like no one else's. It was me who asked Haraki to make a Wabash (probably a good 12 years ago), when I did so, I said let's make the most amazing Wabash in the world. So Haraki did.
The weft and the warp are both individually rope dyed and then woven into the twill fabric. No one else (that we know of anyway) does that, they typically dye the fabric after weaving. It costs a lot more to make it the way we do, but the end result is an immeasurably better fabric (in our opinion), and something Haraki is immeasurably proud of….
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One thing that I am not sure I have articulated well enough, is that our Wabash is like no one else's. It was me who asked Haraki to make a Wabash (probably a good 12 years ago), when I did so, I said let's make the most amazing Wabash in the world. So Haraki did.
The weft and the warp are both individually rope dyed and then woven into the twill fabric. No one else (that we know of anyway) does that, they typically dye the fabric after weaving. It costs a lot more to make it the way we do, but the end result is an immeasurably better fabric (in our opinion), and something Haraki is immeasurably proud of….
I couldn't resist sharing this bit in my Instagram along with these photos of mine.
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The weft and the warp are both individually rope dyed and then woven into the twill fabric. No one else (that we know of anyway) does that, they typically dye the fabric after weaving. It costs a lot more to make it the way we do, but the end result is an immeasurably better fabric (in our opinion), and something Haraki is immeasurably proud of….
Wow! I didn't realize that. That's so cool. And I couldn't agree more about the result of the extra effort.
That shirt is clearly aging immeasurably @Oaktavia! Just wonderful.
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