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MCA VINTAGE REVIVAL

40’s Wool Gabardine Western Shirt (Unisex S)

40’s Wool Gabardine Western Shirt (Unisex S)

Regular price $145.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $145.00 USD
Sale Sold out

1940’s-1950’s Vintage Western Wool Gabardine Shirt

Made in the USA

Fits Unisex Size: Small

   No tagged size

Color: Chocolate Brown

Material: 100% Pure Wool Gabardine

  • Bust: 20.5” flat
  • Length: 29”
  • Shoulders: 17”
  • Sleeve: 23”

Brand: Possibly Buck Bernie Western Wear

Decade: 1940’s

  • Collared
  • Brown Button Down Front
  • Stitch Arrow Detail on Upper Back w/ Box Pleat
  • Single Point Flat Button Chest Pockets
  • 3-Button Sleeve Hem

Beautiful vintage condition. No rips, holes, or tears. There are some iron marks/fades but still really gorgeous. Brand tag is fraying and unreadable. But I believe this to be a Buck Bernie Brand. 


MORE INFO: 

Gabardine western shirts are the most sought after and hardest to find by vintage collectors because of the high quality and durability of the material. It was costly to weave and expensive to tailor. 

Gabardine is a durable warp-face twill weave comprising several varieties of worsted wool, cotton and silk, a tightly woven fabric. Compared to fabrics which preceded it, gabardine was lightweight, soft, super-comfortable, durable, and breathable. Its ability to shed water and break wind helped revolutionize outerwear.

The modern use to describe a fabric rather than a garment dates to Thomas Burberry, founder of the Burberry fashion house, who invented the fabric and revived the name gabardine in 1879. It was introduced by Burberry Clothing, and patented in 1888.

Gabardine is a thick, hard-wearing fabric, ideal for garments subject to heavy wear and tear. Breathable and comfortable: the tight weave of gabardine makes it naturally breathable and very comfortable to wear during all seasons.

H Bar C Ranchwear History

In 1897, a young tailor from Brooklyn named Samuel Christenfeld decides to start designing luxury clothing with an “english riding flare” and called it "Tailoring by Christenfeld, in Brooklyn, NY”. Nine years later, in 1906, he formed a partnership with Mel Halpern and officially changed the name to Halpern and Christenfeld.

After a few years of being partners Christenfeld decided to buy out Halpern, take controlling interest of the company, and changed the name to H-C for legal purposes. Shortly after he changed the name, again, to HBarC.

After Samuel’s death in 1939, HBarC focused on the western market, and started to grow internationally. Seymour moved to California to open the Los Angeles office and established the Hollywood arm of the brand. As a maker of authentic western wear, and the popularity of western movies, many movies began to use HBarC. Catering to the Hollywood elite, HBarC supplied clothes for western movies clothing the likes of Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, John Wayne, Elvis Presley, John Travolta to name only a few.

 

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