The well dressed sailor

  • 20 Oct 2013 03:01
    Reply # 1416983 on 1401645
    The slim legs are easy to tuck into boots, but I have to admit that the effect is not so much like Beau Brummell , more like Max Wall.
  • 14 Oct 2013 07:42
    Reply # 1411723 on 1411549
    Anonymous member (Administrator)
    Annie Hill wrote:
    David Tyler wrote:Come to think of it, Winston Churchill, being somewhat rotund, used to wear smart "boiler suits" made of something like velvet. Maybe I should get my tailor to make me something similar, for a going-ashore outfit.
    Can't wait to see it, David!  Maybe crimson, with a touch of black (so practical) at collar and cuffs?

    .. and I suppose you would fit this one with a "sliding hatch aft" as well, Super Goofey style? Ouch...
    Last modified: 14 Oct 2013 07:52 | Anonymous member (Administrator)
  • 14 Oct 2013 00:35
    Reply # 1411549 on 1411435
    David Tyler wrote:Come to think of it, Winston Churchill, being somewhat rotund, used to wear smart "boiler suits" made of something like velvet. Maybe I should get my tailor to make me something similar, for a going-ashore outfit.
    Can't wait to see it, David!  Maybe crimson, with a touch of black (so practical) at collar and cuffs?
  • 13 Oct 2013 21:39
    Reply # 1411439 on 1401753
    Paul Thompson wrote:Sounds like just the sort of thing I'm going to need for the Southern Ocean. Unfortunately, I have not seen such a garment in NZ :-( The bottom flap is sure to be very handy :-)
    I got my merino wool base-layers here. An Australian company, and better value than others on the market. But no onesie as yet. Have a word with them and see whether there's one coming soon. 
  • 13 Oct 2013 21:31
    Reply # 1411435 on 1401645
    Come to think of it, Winston Churchill, being somewhat rotund, used to wear smart "boiler suits" made of something like velvet. Maybe I should get my tailor to make me something similar, for a going-ashore outfit.
  • 13 Oct 2013 19:21
    Reply # 1411396 on 1401645
    This one is by Helly Hansen Workwear, made under licence by a Canadian company, Climate. It's polyester, which is not ideal, but I wear a merino wool base-layer, so it's not next to the skin. It's what I would class as a mid-layer, and I thought that "onesie" was the new name for the winter combinations that Grandad used to wear.  

    Whatever, it's indubitably quite the thing for cold weather sailing. Being no longer in possession of a waistline, I find a tight waistband is irksome, and this suit gets over that problem, with no disadvantages. The snug fit to the legs makes it easy to don boots.
    Last modified: 13 Oct 2013 21:34 | Anonymous member
  • 30 Sep 2013 21:41
    Reply # 1401836 on 1401645
    I remember reading that Beryl Smeeton made herself a similar garment and referred to it as having a 'sliding hatch aft'.  If it's not made from wool, you'll be a bit minty at the end of a long passage.  Just as well you're single-handed! ;-)

    [Webmaster says: click the link in Jonathan's post above to Google some. They're all the rage with live-aboards in the marina we're in. You meet tigers and bunny rabbits in the 'facilities'. We also see a lot of pink trousers... What are they all about?]
    Last modified: 02 Oct 2013 12:44 | Deleted user
  • 30 Sep 2013 19:55
    Reply # 1401778 on 1401645
    David, It a 'onesie' , albeit apparently a commercial fisherman's 'onesie'. The height of fashion.  You are very much 'on trend'.  jds
    Last modified: 02 Oct 2013 12:41 | Deleted user
  • 30 Sep 2013 19:23
    Reply # 1401753 on 1401645
    Sounds like just the sort of thing I'm going to need for the Southern Ocean. Unfortunately, I have not seen such a garment in NZ :-( The bottom flap is sure to be very handy :-)
  • 30 Sep 2013 17:35
    Message # 1401645
    As this coast has so much commercial fishing activity, it's easy to get good cold weather clothing, I've invested in an all-in-one suit of thick fleece. The top (or should that be the bottom) feature is that it has a good drop-seat, so that it's possible to live in for a rough multi-day passage. Not that I'll need to do one during the sail south to Vancouver Island.

    A toddler's romper suit for grown-ups, if you will.

    Now I'm off to sea to try it out.
       " ...there is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in junk-rigged boats" 
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