Ljungströms (Sweden)
Vintage, 1970s, Georg Sörman, Otten
Vintage, 1970s, Georg Sörman, Otten
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The Swedish-tailored jacket traces a production arc characteristic of mid-20th-century Scandinavian menswear, where imported European fabrics met domestic tailoring traditions to create garments positioned at the upper end of the national market. The cloth originates from Otten, the Austrian–German textile manufacturer whose superfine wool defined much of the high-quality suiting used across Scandinavia during the 1960s–1980s. Their mills supplied tailors who favored tightly controlled worsted structures, consistent fiber selection, and finishing techniques that gave the fabric both stability and a clean fall, making it a natural choice for Swedish workshops of the period. Construction was carried out by Ljungströms Gruppen, a Swedish menswear producer operating as part of a network of garment manufacturers that supplied independent outfitters throughout the country. Their role in this chain reflects the era’s hybrid model in which regional manufacturers produced ready-made or semi-tailored pieces for retailers that still operated with the traditions of bespoke and made-to-measure presentation. The jacket’s stitching approach, label typography, and internal structuring align seamlessly with this timeframe, pointing to practices that dominated Swedish menswear prior to the widespread adoption of mass-market fused tailoring. Once completed, the garment entered the retail environment of Georg Sörman, the Stockholm menswear shop at St. Eriksgatan 44, known for a selection that balanced tailored suits, custom work, and high-end ready-made garments sourced from reputable European fabric houses. The shop catered to clients who valued the continuity of Swedish tailoring combined with distinguished imported cloth, and it frequently stocked garments cut from fabrics supplied by textile firms such as Otten. The Swedish term välsytt, appearing in this context, signals a level of workmanship directly tied to the workshop traditions of the period, while herrnytt situates the piece within the broader category of men’s outfitting that defined Sörman’s business. Together, these elements establish a clear sequence: Otten provided the superfine wool; Ljungströms executed the garment’s construction within Sweden; Sörman, operating as a respected Stockholm outfitter, sold the finished piece to a clientele accustomed to elevated domestic tailoring supported by European materials. Although the cloth itself was imported, every stage of assembly, shaping, and finishing reflects Swedish manufacturing practices of the mid-20th century, resulting in a jacket that stands firmly within the country’s premium menswear traditions of the era.
Size Conversion (approximate):
US Men’s Size: XXXL
EU Men’s Size: 54–56
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