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LOT.703 Denim Jacket C.1920'S Raw Indigo

Sale price$830.00 AUD
COLOUR:
SIZE:

Pickup available at Gertrude St

Usually ready in 1 hour

LOT.703 Denim Jacket C.1920'S Raw Indigo

LOT.703 Denim Jacket C.1920'S Raw Indigo

RAW INDIGO / 38

Gertrude St

Pickup available, usually ready in 1 hour

200 Gertrude Street
Fitzroy VIC 3065
Australia

+61385897600

Gilbert St

Pickup currently unavailable

2D Gilbert Street
Torquay VIC 3228
Australia

Woven slowly on a shuttle loom in Okayama, the LOT.703 Denim Jacket C.1920'S in Raw Indigo by T.T is a 3/1 left-hand twill denim, made from 100% organic American cotton. The warp is rope-dyed with indigo and sulphur to achieve a green-cast blue, while the nep-dyed weft carries a faintly yellowed tone, echoing decades of wear. Sanforized to reduce shrinkage, the result is a crisp but irregular denim with deep character from day one. The jacket’s structure is intentionally restrained: a single patch pocket, single-stitched pleats, and a boxy, flat silhouette with straight-set sleeves. Iron hardware is left raw to patinate, and selvedge detailing appears at the cuffs and front facing. A final nod to tradition comes in the form of a mud-dyed leather patch, hand-finished in Amami Ōshima.

  • Inspired by early 1920s store-brand denim jackets
  • 3/1 left-hand twill selvedge denim 
  • Sanforized to prevent shrinkage
  • Flat silhouette with straight shoulder lines and sleeves
  • Single patch pocket and single-stitched front pleats
  • Iron buttons and rear hardware, uncoated to age over time
  • White selvedge detail
  • Leather patch dyed with traditional mud dye (dorozome) from Amami Ōshima
  • 100% Cotton
  • Made in Japan
  • Ethan is 182cm and is wearing size 40

Please contact us here should you have any inquiries about the product.

T.T, a unisex brand based in New York and Kyoto, was founded by Taiga Takahashi, whose education fused Japanese culture with Western ideas. After graduating from Central Saint Martins in 2017, he launched his brand, centred on the concept of "resurrecting relics of the past to unearth artifacts of the future." Takahashi, an avid collector of vintage garments from the pre-mass production era, emphasizes the historical value of craftsmanship. Through an archaeological lens, he reinterprets time-worn fabrics and sewing details, creating garments meant to endure for centuries, incorporating endangered traditional Japanese techniques and collaborating with skilled artisans.