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Thread: Jean Cotton

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
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    Default Jean Cotton

    Does anyone on have anything made of Jean Cotton? Is it cooler than Jean wool? Are there any setbacks?
    B.S. Baker

    "Sinner, Come view the ground where you shall shortly lie"

    www.29thalabamainfantry.com

  2. #2
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    Feb 2006
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    Not sure what you are looking for. Jean cloth is a cotton warp and wool weft.

    Contrary to a lot of popular belief cotton material that we call jean today was available as well. Many account the name denim as an English version of a fabric made in Nimes France. Levi Strauss and company made denim a household name post war but it does predate the 1860's. In fact I have read that George Washington toured a denim mill in Massachusets in 1789.
    Robert Collett
    8th FL / 13th IN
    Armory Guards
    WIG

  3. #3
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by bsbaker
    Does anyone on have anything made of Jean Cotton? yep Is it cooler than Jean wool? nope Are there any setbacks? it frays easier and isnt as durable
    Cotton Jean = weft and warp of cotton.

    Chris Rideout
    Tampa, Florida

  4. #4
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    I just purchased some jean cotton pants, they are very comfortable
    Cpl. Dustin Saunders
    3rd Regiment, Co. E
    Confederate Engineers
    www.hartsengineers.com

  5. #5
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    42

    Default cotton jean

    Ben tart makes cotton jean as well as cotton cassamire
    Michael Hicks commanding Co. K 6th N.C.S.T.

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by DeoVinde11
    I just purchased some jean cotton pants, they are very comfortable
    That's why I ask, I plan to make a pair from a Galla Rock pattern. Hopefully it turns out well.
    B.S. Baker

    "Sinner, Come view the ground where you shall shortly lie"

    www.29thalabamainfantry.com

  7. #7
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    Sorry about that, I thought this might have been related to an earlier conversation I had about the authenticity of denim so I was misreading the post.
    Robert Collett
    8th FL / 13th IN
    Armory Guards
    WIG

  8. #8
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    I realize this is a dated thread but after visiting a museum in Atlanta, I saw more than one CSA uniform garment, both jackets and pants, that appeared strikingly similar to cotton denim. I'm curious how common it was for CSA troops to have been issued cotton uniforms, or would cotton have been seen more with commutation type garments, or issued only in certain CSA regional departments? I'm making an assumption that today's cotton fabric is not an accurate substitute for the period cotton cloth one would find as CSA uniforms.
    ~Southern Cal~
    aka: Lawrence Jay


    "Do not be afraid of defeat. You are never as close to victory as when defeated in a good cause". -Henry Ward Beecher

  9. #9
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    Some drawbacks to cotton jean would be the loss of wicking ability thereby causing one to to be less comfortable during the day and sleeping in damp cotton can be extremely uncomfortable where sleeping in damp wool though not entirely comfortable would be bearable.
    Christopher Wilson

  10. #10
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    Oct 2009
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    Trans-Miss Confederacy
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    I have a pair of cotton jean pants, but never wear them.

    Reasons being

    If they get wet they get heavy and you're going to be pulling your pants up the entire weekend and they dry VERY slowly.

    They seem to be a lot hotter than the wool jean pants, believe it or not.

    When they get wet, you become miserable. I promise.

    Thats my 2 cents.
    Kindest regards,

    Robert "Rocky" Kilpatrick
    Harold O. Groyle Lodge # 672 F&AM
    O.E.S. Cape Rock # 60
    Knights Templar
    Cape Girardeau, Mo.

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