Eddie Bauer Outlet has t-shirts on sale for $10, which was awesome... until I got home and realized they took 1.5" or so off the shirt lengths for tall sizes. That was discouraging, and I'm afraid that might be their entire line. Ow.
Meanwhile, Amazon.com sent me a link for a sale on Levi's 550s, which come in extended lengths. Unfortunately from the reviews, it looks like at least one of their suppliers dumped blemished/second quality goods, so I'm avoiding that as well.
Might be time to see if JCPenney's in-store selection is still good. I've been surprised in the past, as they tend to sell things in sizes no one else does. That said, I've also seem frankenstein-cut shirts, that were a pleasant +4-5" long, but had the shirt pocket 4-5" lower down, which put the pocket between my belly button and nipples.
Oops?
Monday, April 27, 2009
Gloomy day for my wardrobe
Saturday, March 14, 2009
British Pants!
Alto Clothing was pointed out by a friend, and they stock pants exclusively in 36" and 38" lengths. Zing! They seem to have a fierce collection of ugly shirts, which my girlfriend adores. On the minus side, they're in the UK, and shipping is 15 quid. That's $20ish right now, but still, 36 and 38 inseam is a niche, niche market; I haven't seen cargo pants in 36, ever!
Friday, March 13, 2009
Motorcycle Jacket
Okay, Motoport/Cycleport seems to make custom textile jackets, although they're pricey. $400 + $200 for the liner. Really debating on this one, as that's about twice what I figure it's worth, but it'd probably fit significantly better than anything else I've found. For anyone else staggering across this who's maybe not as tall, the gold standard might be the Aerostich stuff; they'll do a semi custom, but not a full custom to stretch quite this far. For leather, Vanson came highly recommended, but they'll do any number of options, but not necessarily add length?
If anyone's looking for the tallest of the non-custom talls, Tourmaster's jackets and Fieldsheer's pants seem to do me well so far.
Friday, February 6, 2009
Russel Dri-Fit Athletic Shirts
So, I ordered from Amazon:
Russell Athletic Men's Big & Tall Dri-Power Peformance Crewneck T-Shirt
The comments didn't lie. I ordered this at Large-Tall, and a conservative estimate puts it at XXLT, probably more like XXXLT. Omar the Tent Maker had extra fabric, and he decided to add it here. On the plus side, I wouldn't call it tall, but Extra Tall, so call this (LT) a XXXLXT.
Going to have it taken in, so I have one shirt that actually pulls below my beltline while I'm on a bicycle. Still, the hunt for extra-long athletic shirts goes on.
Sunday, January 25, 2009
Tall athletic shirts?
I love the polyesterish fabric athletic t-shirts, that kinda wick the sweat away from ya. But I can't find them in tall sizes. The best I had was an REI shirt from five years ago, but the cut (as of four years ago) is about three inches shorter at the waist. (Ahck!)
Eddie Bauer makes a shirt that's a compromise, but it's also pretty notably logo-ed, which I'm not a fan of. Speedo made a shirt I liked, but I can't find duplicates of it.
Any ideas, oh reader?
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Gigantic Cat Tree
So, we got a cat. It's name is still to be determined, but we've gotten a few toys for it. Since it kept trying to get onto the mantle - cats like high places - we decided to get a cat tree. A cat tree higher than the mantle, in fact, so it fits here.
A trip to Petco later provided an awful lot of failures. For $120-250, you could have a sturdy plywood structure with carpet haphazardly stapled to it, and exposed plywood in various places. We were very much not impressed. For $300+, you could have something that looked solid, and had carpet well attached, but $300 is an *awful* lot to spend on a piece of furniture for a cat, in my book.
Enter the generic Petco brand cat tree. You have to assemble it yourself, but assembly was very easy, and instead of being 100% carpeted, it's hardwood birch with carpeting where the cat sits. It was $150ish, and sits the cat eye level with me, which the cat seems vaguely satisfied with. It's *furniture*, in my book, defined as "higher quality than Ikea produces". A+++. Would buy again. Ironically, the box was covered in about a 1/4" of dust, as the prebuilt carpeted things sell well, whereas the stuff you can't see pre-assembled doesn't seem to sell well at all.
Monday, November 10, 2008
Distractions and Motorcycles
I was distracted by a move across state lines, a new apartment, a new job, a used motorcycle, and a gently-used cat.
That said, the motorcycle gave me endless opportunities for trying out a few things. Specifically looking for a jacket to cover me if I fall off the bike, I'd really appreciate if the jacket came down to my hips, and roughly to my wrists. Normally, I buy outerwear a size or so too big, and the extra room in the torso helps to become extra room for my arms, but that doesn't work very well for motorcycle gear. The reason is that if you have an extra 2-4" of torso material in a jacket, it *really* flaps in the wind at 65 mph.
That said, Vanson Leathers will make you anything you want, but at a price. For textile jackets, Aerostich makes a semi-custom, but can only extend jackets by 2" and pants by 3", which isn't really enough for me. Firstgear came very recommended for reasonably priced textile gear, but their tall sizes required me sending back two jackets and giving up. Folks have recommended Motoport for full custom kevlar gear, and Gerbing's for heated gear.
Then someone said they were about my height and fit a Cortech jacket. Cortech is made by the same company as Tourmaster, and Tourmaster's stuff, I like. Which brought me to a Tourmaster Intake 2 mesh jacket, which is a hair short, and a hair too wide, but for $120, A++. Ordered a LT, then wound up ordering and keeping an XLT.
It's been amazing how many folks have had decent suggestions, and just how many people have had a friendly word to say. Motorcycle Superstore was great with selection, and price, and New Enough had the best return policy I've ever, ever seen, combined with lowest-on-the-internet prices.
More about choices on pants and gloves in another post. Heck, another post on the bike is also in order, as it was a bit of a headache to find something good on gas that I fit onto. For the not motorcycle inclined - especially as I'm posting about a bike in November - I'll try and focus on other things shortly, as well.