WHY is the jacket worn over the bag, and not vice versa?
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- Indiana Jerry
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WHY is the jacket worn over the bag, and not vice versa?
I admit, I *think* I know the answer here, but as a new MKVII wearer, I'm having an issue getting used to this...
...why is it worn (Indy-accurately) under the jacket?
(If someone recalls a thread on this, let me know, I searched for several variations of 'jacket' 'over' 'strap'/'bag', and got bupkus.) Even money on whether it's Swindiana or VP collecting the pints on this round.
If I treat the bag like anything else (work bag, laptop bag, luggage, i.e., NOT part of my person), then it is an accessory that goes on AFTER the jacket. This makes more sense getting into the truck - toss the bag on the seat, leave the jacket on. If it's under, I'm taking the jacket off, then the bag, putting the jacket back on...
But if I treat it like essential stuff that DOESN'T COME off (like, say, a soldiers gearbelt, a toolbelt, a bat utility belt, a shoulder holster, etc. - something PART OF ME), then the jacket is an extra that goes on afterward, and even getting in the truck, that bag would be at my side. Even if it does get crunched in the door a wee bit.
I'm guessing the answer is that - for the character - this is an essential piece, and the jacket, although pretty dear, comes off depending on the weather, but the bag never does - it's his wallet, it's his utility belt.
And likewise, for the sake of the look of the movie - the jacket lines are unbunched and unbroken by wearing it over the bag.
If I'm right, then it depends on the mode of my day, right? If I'm going to the office, I'm not wearing that bag everywhere, so it's an extra. If I'm out hiking or at the zoo w/ the kids or something, it's going to STAY on, so it's essential equipment.
Have I missed something?
Commence mocking me and my man-purse.
Thanks,
J
...why is it worn (Indy-accurately) under the jacket?
(If someone recalls a thread on this, let me know, I searched for several variations of 'jacket' 'over' 'strap'/'bag', and got bupkus.) Even money on whether it's Swindiana or VP collecting the pints on this round.
If I treat the bag like anything else (work bag, laptop bag, luggage, i.e., NOT part of my person), then it is an accessory that goes on AFTER the jacket. This makes more sense getting into the truck - toss the bag on the seat, leave the jacket on. If it's under, I'm taking the jacket off, then the bag, putting the jacket back on...
But if I treat it like essential stuff that DOESN'T COME off (like, say, a soldiers gearbelt, a toolbelt, a bat utility belt, a shoulder holster, etc. - something PART OF ME), then the jacket is an extra that goes on afterward, and even getting in the truck, that bag would be at my side. Even if it does get crunched in the door a wee bit.
I'm guessing the answer is that - for the character - this is an essential piece, and the jacket, although pretty dear, comes off depending on the weather, but the bag never does - it's his wallet, it's his utility belt.
And likewise, for the sake of the look of the movie - the jacket lines are unbunched and unbroken by wearing it over the bag.
If I'm right, then it depends on the mode of my day, right? If I'm going to the office, I'm not wearing that bag everywhere, so it's an extra. If I'm out hiking or at the zoo w/ the kids or something, it's going to STAY on, so it's essential equipment.
Have I missed something?
Commence mocking me and my man-purse.
Thanks,
J
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Good point, we don't want it getting snagged on a branch, a post, a tank gun...oh, rats...nevermind.Indiana Jess wrote:I dunno all the reasons why, but it might be under the jacket to keep the strap from getting hung up on something like a branch. Just my two cents ... wait ... I have no sense.
EDIT: That's something that bugged me...wasn't his bag UNDER his jacket then? Good luck getting it off!
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If you're in Cairo, you don't wanna be wearing your jacket in the day, but will at night... you always wanna keep your artifacts and such close at hand, but the jacket can come and go as needed.
or, if someone grabs you by the jacket, you can slip out of it and still keep your secret stuff.
It's really tricky to remove your jacket when the day's turned from chilly to sweltering when you're driving and there's a strap holding it on. I hate steering with my teeth, so it's easier and faster to whip off the jacket that way.
Plus you don't want them purse snatchers peeling that strap right off ya. the jacket protects the goods.
all that being said, I rarely wear the bag under the jacket. Gotta get used to it though, because it makes a lot more sense.
or, if someone grabs you by the jacket, you can slip out of it and still keep your secret stuff.
It's really tricky to remove your jacket when the day's turned from chilly to sweltering when you're driving and there's a strap holding it on. I hate steering with my teeth, so it's easier and faster to whip off the jacket that way.
Plus you don't want them purse snatchers peeling that strap right off ya. the jacket protects the goods.
all that being said, I rarely wear the bag under the jacket. Gotta get used to it though, because it makes a lot more sense.
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What bugs me more, is that in order to have gotten it snagged at all, Indy'd have to have gone right to the end of the gun and then all the way back to the middle where he was hung up.Indiana Jerry wrote:we don't want it getting snagged on a... tank gun...oh, rats...nevermind.
EDIT: That's something that bugged me...wasn't his bag UNDER his jacket then? Good luck getting it off!
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Hey, he was figuring it out as he went along.Snakewhip_Sable wrote:What bugs me more, is that in order to have gotten it snagged at all, Indy'd have to have gone right to the end of the gun and then all the way back to the middle where he was hung up.Indiana Jerry wrote:we don't want it getting snagged on a... tank gun...oh, rats...nevermind.
EDIT: That's something that bugged me...wasn't his bag UNDER his jacket then? Good luck getting it off!
Last edited by Indiana Jerry on Wed Apr 13, 2005 2:22 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Hehehe...I was wondering what you'd say about this, because you'd pointed out before in your pics that your bag was over your jacket...so does my rationale for why you did that fit? When you were urban spelunking (forgot what you called it), was the jacket more essential than the bag?Snakewhip_Sable wrote:all that being said, I rarely wear the bag under the jacket. Gotta get used to it though, because it makes a lot more sense.
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"Doc, I had that dream again..."Snakewhip_Sable wrote:That's a tough call, because the bag has the flashlights, spare batteries, water bottle and snack/granola bars, which are lifesaving, but the jacket keeps a fella warm and free from barb wire stabs and roadrash.
Something to keep me up at night, I guess.
"The one where your bag strap is stuck on the gun barrel, and you realized you're wearing your jacket over it and so you're going to die?"
"That's the one..."
When traveling I always pack my shoulder bag and laptop bag under my jacket, even when it's quite hot. This prevents anyone from performing the classic "snatch and run" and also discourages pick pocketeers. In the Indy films, I think they decided to keep the bag under the jacket for appearance sake and also to keep it on during all the action. I mean it's hard enough to keep the hat on, Indy doesn't need to worry about the bag too.
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I think it comes from the early Steranko designs for Indy.
Originally it looks as if it wasn't a bag strap but some kind of strap that didn't really serve any purpose but to look cool.
So I think when they came to make the costume for the film it was a case of just making what was close to the design and why not make it a little more practical than just having a belt around one's chest.
Originally it looks as if it wasn't a bag strap but some kind of strap that didn't really serve any purpose but to look cool.
So I think when they came to make the costume for the film it was a case of just making what was close to the design and why not make it a little more practical than just having a belt around one's chest.
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In real life there are several goods points to wear the bag under the jacket. But when it comes to the movie I think it is just for looks. I've often wondered about this while hiking. If the bag is over the jacket it will effect the drape of the jacket. However, if the bag is under the jacket the jacket will drape naturally.
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This is my thinking, too. What if Indy had to run further than he did with all those Hovito warriors chasing him. He could strip off the jacket without bothering with the bag.I'm guessing the answer is that - for the character - this is an essential piece, and the jacket, although pretty dear, comes off depending on the weather, but the bag never does - it's his wallet, it's his utility belt.
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I thought it was common knowledge that if you don't eat you'll eventually die. Do I gotta spell everything out for you? It doesn't so much save a life as sustain and maintain it. If I weren't around to remind you to eat, it would look like a Jim Jones kool aid party cleanup in here, wouldn't it?!
As an added note, the foil wrapper from the eaten granola bar used with flashlight batteries can start a lifesaving campfire, and a rubberband and toothpick can be used as a makeshift bow and arrow to shoot guards and as a lockpick to escape your wrongful confinement in a prison cell.
Oh, Richard Dean Anderson, you crazy muther.
As an added note, the foil wrapper from the eaten granola bar used with flashlight batteries can start a lifesaving campfire, and a rubberband and toothpick can be used as a makeshift bow and arrow to shoot guards and as a lockpick to escape your wrongful confinement in a prison cell.
Oh, Richard Dean Anderson, you crazy muther.
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Geez, way to take a joke! Sorry if I offended anybody.I thought it was common knowledge that if you don't eat you'll eventually die. Do I gotta spell everything out for you? It doesn't so much save a life as sustain and maintain it. If I weren't around to remind you to eat, it would look like a Jim Jones kool aid party cleanup in here, wouldn't it?!
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Obviously, you have never seen me eat. A granola bar would sustain and maintain me for about five minutes. Just long enough to start wondering where we were gonna go to eat.Snakewhip_Sable wrote:I thought it was common knowledge that if you don't eat you'll eventually die. Do I gotta spell everything out for you? It doesn't so much save a life as sustain and maintain it. If I weren't around to remind you to eat, it would look like a Jim Jones kool aid party cleanup in here, wouldn't it?!
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P.S. Wore my man purse for the first time today - at a government conference. One of the younger airmen actually said, "Nice man-purse." Good thing he already owes me beer.
But the older military took a good long look at it, and thought it was pretty cool. They actually used the words 'vintage' and 'antique'. (Although probably not old enough to be technically antique...I forget, is that 50 years, or 100?)
One guy even asked if I was using a rifle sling for a strap. These guys were SHARP.
Only one person thought I was a boy scout...
But the older military took a good long look at it, and thought it was pretty cool. They actually used the words 'vintage' and 'antique'. (Although probably not old enough to be technically antique...I forget, is that 50 years, or 100?)
One guy even asked if I was using a rifle sling for a strap. These guys were SHARP.
Only one person thought I was a boy scout...
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Lemme tell ya that I just recently got back from a weekend in NH, my friend who goes to Plymouth State U showed a bunch of us this cabin up the Apalician Trail. Anyways, I was in complete Indy-mode for this (believe you me, I got the laughs and snickers to proove it, lol), and naturally I had my bag under my jacket. I think having it underneath makes it so the bag doesnt want to slip off your shoulder when you hike up a mountain trail. In the past I've had camera bags over my shoulder, over a jacket and they tend to slip. To me, having the bag under the jacket makes things a bit easier....dont forget that Indy did a lot of walking/hiking in the movies. He's rarely seen in a vehicle in his "fight-clothes". And to clear up a previous point, Indy does NOT wear the bag in the Raven Bar sceens (I wonder why?). Just a few observations for ya.
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I use saddlebags as my briefcase. The shoulder of my old leather jacket that I carry it on is a little darker than the other. but I guess it's all part of the natural distressing process called "the daily grind".rick5150 wrote:The jacket would look goofy after a while with the strap causing a lot of distressing on one shoulder.
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I have to agree with the idea of uneven distressing on the jacket.
This habit does lead to a minor continuity goof in LC, when Indy and Dad escape from the castle. In one shot, Indy collects his bag and Dad's satchel and slings the bag over his shoulder, over the jacket. In the next shot, the bag is worn underneath the jacket.
This habit does lead to a minor continuity goof in LC, when Indy and Dad escape from the castle. In one shot, Indy collects his bag and Dad's satchel and slings the bag over his shoulder, over the jacket. In the next shot, the bag is worn underneath the jacket.
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Welcome to COW!
I agree that one shoulder would become more distressed than the other. However, the thing about natural distressing is that it IS uneven. I think that the reason that it is worn under the jacket in the movie is looks. Wearing the bag under the jacket allows the jacket to drape naturally.
I agree that one shoulder would become more distressed than the other. However, the thing about natural distressing is that it IS uneven. I think that the reason that it is worn under the jacket in the movie is looks. Wearing the bag under the jacket allows the jacket to drape naturally.
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And here I thought I'd really be starting another dead thread. Hunh. Okay, appreciate all the input!
Man-purse got worn around the LA Zoo today - emminently useful, and almost bottomless! (I checked for a big hole, but no dice, it really holds a lot of stuff!) Now I know why so many of the wives/girlfriends steal them...my wife actually stopped looking at it so silly for a while, too...
LA weather is getting TOO HOT for the Wested - even the lamb - so I'm going to be Cairo for a long time now. And pray for rain...
J
Man-purse got worn around the LA Zoo today - emminently useful, and almost bottomless! (I checked for a big hole, but no dice, it really holds a lot of stuff!) Now I know why so many of the wives/girlfriends steal them...my wife actually stopped looking at it so silly for a while, too...
LA weather is getting TOO HOT for the Wested - even the lamb - so I'm going to be Cairo for a long time now. And pray for rain...
J
Neolithic wrote:I think it comes from the early Steranko designs for Indy.
Originally it looks as if it wasn't a bag strap but some kind of strap that didn't really serve any purpose but to look cool.
So I think when they came to make the costume for the film it was a case of just making what was close to the design and why not make it a little more practical than just having a belt around one's chest.
I think Neolithic is on the right track here. The strap in the illustrations does serve a purpose however:
It appears to be a carry over of the Sam Brown belt design. From the Web:
"Who was Sam Browne?
The belt worn by so many officers is named after British General Sir Samuel Browne (1824-1901). It is described by Webster's as "a belt with a shoulder strap running diagonally across the chest, worn as part of a military or police uniform." Common legend has it that the belt was designed by Browne after his left arm was severed during battle in India. The original strap is said to have helped to stabilize the belt for the one-handed drawing of a saber and also may have helped to take weight off the hips. "
If you look at the illustrations, you'll see the strap attaches to the left side of the leather or the pistol belt, in this case a khaki cotton 2 inch military web belt. It sort of looks like the shoulder strap is attached to the leather belt, but due to the leather belt running thru the belt loops on the pants, I believe it is attaching to the web belt just aft of the .45 magazine pouch. That is a tough call since it would seem that a leather strap would afix to a leather belt.
I'm thinking that it was drawn that way to utilize the whip which would be carried on the left, non-gun side.