Iron Heart Denim Glossary - Beta version
-
Hi everyone.
For the last few months I've been helping the crew in Gosport with a denim glossary for the Iron Heart International website. We want it to be of use to everyone who is interested in our niche corner of the clothing world, and as such it contains a broad range of denim related terms. At the same time we want it to be specific to the brand, so there is a great deal of IH specific information included. We also have plans to illustrate it and cross-link it with the website.
It is at the point where there are enough entries to publish it, but it is by no means finished. It is very much a "beta-version". As such we would appreciate forum user's input, through you guys commenting, suggesting entries we need to include, or improvements we can make. Please do take a look at the beta-version here:
https://www.ironheart.co.uk/content/denim-glossary
All comments and suggestions for entries should be posted on this thread and will be greatly appreciated. The crew and I will make updates regularly and hopefully we can make this a truly comprehensive, useful resource for everyone.
Cheers,
Reuben (or neph93, if you like
)
-
Impressive. I'm sure that list took many hours of effort.
-
The format of the definition of Left Hand Twill needs to be fixed. Looks like a copy-paste error in which one of the two alternatives was updated.
-
That is fantastic. A term that I’ve occasionally heard,that I’m not really sure of,or if it in any way pertains to IH,is Deadstock. I get the impression that it’s something that I should think is cool,but I’m not sure why.
Thanks! Deadstock was originally covered under an entry for «Vintage Denim» but that seems to have disappeared in an edit. We’ll consider how to fix that.
(Between you and me, deadstock is fabric or finished articles that are no longer made, but have been stored. As a theoretical example, if Haraki-san went into his store house and found a roll of UHR that had been sat there for 10 years it would be considered deadstock. Any jeans made from that roll could also be called deadstock. Obviously, rare and limited items, especially with the provenance of age, have a certain amount of «cool» attached to them).
-
Just a minor suggestion but IMO "boyfriend" should be "boyfriend cut"?
-
"IWHWIH" - Giles speak for 'haven't got a fucking clue'. when i know more, you will too.
jokes aside, that's quite a fantastic list there.. @neph93
-
"IWHWIH" - Giles speak for 'haven't got a fucking clue'. when i know more, you will too.
jokes aside, that's quite a fantastic list there.. @neph93
[emoji23][emoji23][emoji23] that needs to go in…
-
yeah was the first thing i looked for but it wasn't there..
-
An excerpt from the Chino definition;
"The etymology of the term chino is disputed. Some sources identify the root as the American Spanish language word chino, which translated, literally means toasted."
Spanish is not my native language but I'm fairly familiar with it and as far as I know Chino means Chinese, not toasted. Anybody who's fluent in Spanish here can correct me if I'm wrong obviously…but I'm about 99% certain Chino does not mean toasted. Tostado (tostada, feminine) is the translation for toasted.
-
Found it… it isn’t toasted in the sense of «tostada», and it is an archaic/colloquial term.
-
Interesting. That's news to me.
-
1.Atari Fade- This jacket has been overdyed black with a fugitive pigment dye which is an unstable and un-permanent dye that fades to later show the indigo denim underneath. Essentially this is a denim that begins black and fades to indigo in high friction areas, or what the Japanese call the "atari" fade. (that is a copy/paste from self edge on the IH OD type III)
2. Hidden Placket- I figured this could use a proper definition and be included.
3. Cuffing- Single, Double, Tokyo Turnup, etc.
4. Over Engineered - gotta be something here
5. Release Date- means absolutely nothing
-
Ventile also japanese ventile
is a registered trademark used to brand a special high-quality woven cotton fabric first developed by scientists at the Shirley Institute in Manchester, England. Originally created to overcome a shortage of flax used for fire hoses and water buckets, its properties were also found to be ideal for pilots' immersion suits.Extra-long-staple (ELS) cotton fibres are used to form a low-twist yarn, which is then woven into a tight high-density textile to create a 100% cotton fabric, capable of providing an effective barrier against inclement weather. In wet weather the softly spun yarns - within the tight weave - dynamically expand to form an effective barrier against the elements. (Wiki)
It is too long but interesting
-
Wax
Of paraffine origin is used to make cotton stuff more resistable against elements as wind and water also wax makes cotton clothing live longer… -
Blanked Lining lining out of woolen blanket
Red bondage lining red cotton lining to improve wind resistanceThe 21 oz effect: makes you thinking if you wearing "normal" jeans you would wear stuff out of newspaper or so