IHSH-129 - Indigo Check Heavy Selvedge Flannel Western Shirt - Blue & Green
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Yup. Nice one @cutlasshound. Me too. O'Doyle Rules!
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Love the color way of these !
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^^^
u think you would have noticed it if it wasn't pointed out to you?
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The pattern match certainly does stand out, not sure it would be an issue wearing it…..for some folks.
Love the color and pattern
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the skew adds character. Don't think I would have noticed if it wasn't pointed out
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I think the skew will bother people differently. I got my XL today and I'm going to sell it. I may not have noticed it if it wasn't brought up but now that it's there and I see it in the mirror, I don't think I'll wear it. I love the colours and the feel of the shirt but can't get past both the skew and the pockets. I don't think I'm anal but maybe I am.
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I think the skew will bother people differently. I got my XL today and I'm going to sell it. I may not have noticed it if it wasn't brought up but now that it's there and I see it in the mirror, I don't think I'll wear it. I love the colours and the feel of the shirt but can't get past both the skew and the pockets. I don't think I'm anal but maybe I am.
Completely agree, my thoughts exactly. This is why I held off on this one.
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I know this may be over simplifying things and everyone has there preferences but in my mind, after all is said and done, it's just a shirt. A high quality one of a kind shirt, but a shirt all the same. Im looking forward to mine and if it doesn't fit or I don't like it, it can be returned simple enough.
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I repeat, Haraki and I do not consider it a flaw, just like we don't consider leg twist in shuttle woven denim a flaw. If we considered it a flaw, we would have not released them…
The original run of the TG's had a variety of constructional issues, these do not. All that is "wrong" with them is that being a shuttle woven twill, the fabric has twist. To sew this fabric into a shirt that is perfectly symmetrical is an impossibility. Would we have preferred them to be symmetrical,? Yes of course, but our magic wands just would not take the skew out of the fabric....
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I know this may be over simplifying things and everyone has there preferences but in my mind, after all is said and done, it's just a shirt. A high quality one of a kind shirt, but a shirt all the same. Im looking forward to mine and if it doesn't fit or I don't like it, it can be returned simple enough.
This!
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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I know this may be over simplifying things and everyone has there preferences but in my mind, after all is said and done, it's just a shirt. A high quality one of a kind shirt, but a shirt all the same. Im looking forward to mine and if it doesn't fit or I don't like it, it can be returned simple enough.
I understand what you're saying but the crowd that's in this forum and most customers who buy IH and other Japanese made products aren't exactly the type that look at a shirt and say…"it's just a shirt". If that were the case we wouldn't be here and we would be buying our clothes at any shopping mall or large chain store. We wouldn't care about selvedge denim, raw denim, heavyweight denim, unsanforized denim, left hand twill, etc...or even know what any of those terms mean. If that were the case we wouldn't spend the money that we do on these items.
We aren't exactly the normal customer. We are different and maybe a little crazy??? If I honestly had the "it's just a shirt" attitude I wouldn't be spending 300 plus dollars on a single item and I would go to my local WalMart to buy my clothes.
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@manufc10 a little crazy? I never thought in a million years id ever be writing or contributing on a forum about clothes! you are absolutely right about the brand and it is no easy matter to be shelling out 300+ on a pair of jeans or a shirt. To be honest I really dont know what most of those terms mean. I just buy what I like. And I know with these high end brands the money is well worth it because whatever you buy will last a lifetime. I shouldnt have boiled it down to such a simple statement. We all have our own reasons for buying what we buy.