Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your 4th grader even like the coat? It's something Kate Middleton would wear. Kids don't always like "nice" clothes if they are very different from what the other kids are wearing.
Agree. I have a Barbour. I’m assuming you mean one of their traditional waxed jackets? They are great for rainy days an adult on hikes, running earrands, walking to work, but I’d never put a kid in one for the school playground. They are quite structured and it really isn’t appropriate outerwear for recess IMO. They aren’t warm alone and need layering and no way could you traverse the monkey bars in one
Op here. Part of the appeal for him is that it’s not puffy. He doesn’t like the feel of the puffy jackets for whatever reason it’s always irked him. He also never liked the touch sensation of bumpier/rougher textured fleece and Sherpa jackets. When given it he said he also likes it because it’s different than any thing he had seen before. He thinks it’s pretty cool which I mean, is that not the goal of finding something you find cool at that age? I don’t need to rewax it apparently until it wears off and it’s fitting loose enough he had movement. It’s still too warm to wear it but I think it’s giving him the option to not wear the Sherpa or puffers. I’m going to still seek a cheaper alternative too as a second jacket for this year - one that is versatile enough for rain, sleet, snow, or shine. Not too heavy, not too light.
Financially, would we be able to replace it? No. But because he does think it’s cool, I do want him to enjoy it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your 4th grader even like the coat? It's something Kate Middleton would wear. Kids don't always like "nice" clothes if they are very different from what the other kids are wearing.
Agree. I have a Barbour. I’m assuming you mean one of their traditional waxed jackets? They are great for rainy days an adult on hikes, running earrands, walking to work, but I’d never put a kid in one for the school playground. They are quite structured and it really isn’t appropriate outerwear for recess IMO. They aren’t warm alone and need layering and no way could you traverse the monkey bars in one
Op here. Part of the appeal for him is that it’s not puffy. He doesn’t like the feel of the puffy jackets for whatever reason it’s always irked him. He also never liked the touch sensation of bumpier/rougher textured fleece and Sherpa jackets. When given it he said he also likes it because it’s different than any thing he had seen before. He thinks it’s pretty cool which I mean, is that not the goal of finding something you find cool at that age? I don’t need to rewax it apparently until it wears off and it’s fitting loose enough he had movement. It’s still too warm to wear it but I think it’s giving him the option to not wear the Sherpa or puffers. I’m going to still seek a cheaper alternative too as a second jacket for this year - one that is versatile enough for rain, sleet, snow, or shine. Not too heavy, not too light.
Financially, would we be able to replace it? No. But because he does think it’s cool, I do want him to enjoy it.
This is all reasonable OP. Sounds like you've thought it through enough.
FWIW I think I could make it across our monkey bars in my Barbour. Maybe mine doesn't fit right?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your 4th grader even like the coat? It's something Kate Middleton would wear. Kids don't always like "nice" clothes if they are very different from what the other kids are wearing.
Agree. I have a Barbour. I’m assuming you mean one of their traditional waxed jackets? They are great for rainy days an adult on hikes, running earrands, walking to work, but I’d never put a kid in one for the school playground. They are quite structured and it really isn’t appropriate outerwear for recess IMO. They aren’t warm alone and need layering and no way could you traverse the monkey bars in one
Op here. Part of the appeal for him is that it’s not puffy. He doesn’t like the feel of the puffy jackets for whatever reason it’s always irked him. He also never liked the touch sensation of bumpier/rougher textured fleece and Sherpa jackets. When given it he said he also likes it because it’s different than any thing he had seen before. He thinks it’s pretty cool which I mean, is that not the goal of finding something you find cool at that age? I don’t need to rewax it apparently until it wears off and it’s fitting loose enough he had movement. It’s still too warm to wear it but I think it’s giving him the option to not wear the Sherpa or puffers. I’m going to still seek a cheaper alternative too as a second jacket for this year - one that is versatile enough for rain, sleet, snow, or shine. Not too heavy, not too light.
Financially, would we be able to replace it? No. But because he does think it’s cool, I do want him to enjoy it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your 4th grader even like the coat? It's something Kate Middleton would wear. Kids don't always like "nice" clothes if they are very different from what the other kids are wearing.
Agree. I have a Barbour. I’m assuming you mean one of their traditional waxed jackets? They are great for rainy days an adult on hikes, running earrands, walking to work, but I’d never put a kid in one for the school playground. They are quite structured and it really isn’t appropriate outerwear for recess IMO. They aren’t warm alone and need layering and no way could you traverse the monkey bars in one
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you in PG or Bethesda? That matters.
A lot of murders happen because of jackets.
Used Barbour is not an in-demand item in the ES set, unless OP's kid being targeted by a roving band of outdoorsy WASPs, but I appreciate your poor attempt at a flame war.
You have no idea. This stuff happens often and you're crazy if you think murders only happen for expensive items. . A person was mudered in Fort Washington in 2005 over a $350 North Face jacket.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/a-jacket-to-die-for/2012/11/30/b3e8bc48-3b26-11e2-8a97-363b0f9a0ab3_story.html
https://www.npr.org/2019/11/26/782941770/after-36-years-in-prison-for-georgetown-jacket-murder-3-men-are-exonerated-at-la
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9383419/Hussain-Chaudhry-Teenager-18-arrested-murder-law-student.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your 4th grader even like the coat? It's something Kate Middleton would wear. Kids don't always like "nice" clothes if they are very different from what the other kids are wearing.
Agree. I have a Barbour. I’m assuming you mean one of their traditional waxed jackets? They are great for rainy days an adult on hikes, running earrands, walking to work, but I’d never put a kid in one for the school playground. They are quite structured and it really isn’t appropriate outerwear for recess IMO. They aren’t warm alone and need layering and no way could you traverse the monkey bars in one
Anonymous wrote:No. My DS lost several jackets in elementary school by leaving them on the playground at recess. Some turned up in lost and found, others did not.
Anonymous wrote:Does your 4th grader even like the coat? It's something Kate Middleton would wear. Kids don't always like "nice" clothes if they are very different from what the other kids are wearing.