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Rugged Style: The Pea Coat

Rugged Style: The Pea Coat

The pea coat, you know the one. That heavy, woolen thing you throw on when the weather turns to crap. You probably see it hanging in your closet, looking like it’s got something to say, something old. And you'd be right. This coat’s got more history than most of us have patience.

It started with the Dutch. Sailors. The kind of guys who worked the ocean back in the 1700s. They didn’t have time for fashion, and they sure as hell didn’t care about what looked good. What they needed was something that could stand up to the wind, the rain, the saltwater—all the stuff that tries to wear you down when you’re out there on the sea, feeling like the world’s about to swallow you whole. So, they came up with the “Pije” coat. Thick, tough wool. Something that didn’t give a damn about the weather.

 

 



And guess what? It worked. That coat survived the open ocean, and that’s not an easy thing to do. But like most good things, it didn’t stay a secret for long. The Brits got their hands on it, slapped a new name on it—pea coat, because we can never leave anything alone—and it spread like a virus. Other navies started using it because when you find something that keeps your sailors from freezing to death, you don’t ask questions. You just use it.

By the 20th century, the pea coat had become a uniform staple. The kind of thing worn by men who had more guts than glory. World Wars came and went, and the coat stayed, out there on ships, on docks, in trenches. Soldiers, sailors, anyone who needed to stay warm in a world that didn’t care if they did. That’s what the pea coat was for. And that’s what it still is.

 



Pike Brothers, they’re still making the damn thing like they did in the 1930s.
1000 grams of virgin wool per square meter. Heavy. Brutal. No cutting corners. Fabric straight out of Portugal, like something built to take a beating and then take a few more for good measure. It reminds you that life’s cold, and you’re gonna need something thick to survive it.

Now, it’s a fashion statement. You see it in coffee shops, on city streets, worn by people who’ve never set foot on a boat in their lives. It’s fine. Everything gets watered down eventually. The world’s good at that. But when you put on a pea coat, you’re still putting on all those years of history, all those storms, all those men who didn’t have the luxury of caring about comfort or style. They just wanted to stay alive.

 



And so, the pea coat survives. Maybe you wear it because it looks good. Or maybe, deep down, you just want to feel like you’ve got something on your back that won’t fall apart when things get tough. Either way, it’s still here. Stubborn, like the sea it came from.

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