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・ Ridin' the Tweetsie Railroad
・ Ridin' Thumb
・ Ridin' Wild
・ Ridin' with Panama Red
・ Riding
・ Riding (country subdivision)
・ Riding (surname)
・ Riding a Black Unicorn Down the Side of an Erupting Volcano While Drinking from a Chalice Filled with the Laughter of Small Children
・ Riding aids
・ Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles
・ Riding association
・ Riding Away
・ Riding Bean
・ Riding boot
・ Riding circuit
Riding coat
・ Riding coattails
・ Riding dirty
・ Riding Down from Bangor
・ Riding Facility, Riem
・ Riding figures
・ Riding for Germany
・ Riding for My Life
・ Riding for the Disabled Association
・ Riding Giants
・ Riding habit
・ Riding hall
・ Riding High
・ Riding High (1937 film)
・ Riding High (1943 film)


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Riding coat : ウィキペディア英語版
Riding coat

A riding coat is a garment originally designed as outerwear for horseback riding. Original waterproof designs – similar to a mackintosh – generally comprised a full-length coat with wide skirt and leg straps to keep it in place. Other typical features included a belted waist, large patch pockets with protective flap, raglan sleeves with tab and wind cuff, fly front, throat tab and a broad collar.
==History==
(詳細はCharles Macintosh (1766–1843) patented his invention for waterproof rubberised cloth, pressing together two sheets of cotton material with dissolved India-rubber sandwiched in between. It was a brilliant idea for making any fabric weatherproof, and the very first macintosh coats were made at the family's dyestuffs factory, Charles Macintosh and Co of Glasgow.
The rubber processing pioneer Thomas Hancock (1786–1865) was aware of Macintosh’s work and in 1825 he took out a licence to manufacture the patented "waterproof double textures". For historical background, refer to the hardback "The Hancocks of Marlborough"〔"The Hancocks of Marlborough" by John Loadman & Francis James, Oxford University Press, 2009〕 and website "Bouncing Balls", author John Loadman〔(Bouncing-Balls.com, author John Loadman )〕
Using masticated scrap rubber instead, Hancock's solutions had a higher rubber content than those of Macintosh and so could more readily give a uniform film on the cloth, minimising water penetration and odour.
Eventually the two men co-operated, so that in 1831 Hancock became a partner in Charles Macintosh & Co and their two companies merged. One feature of the co-operation was the construction of an automated spreading machine to replace Macintosh’s original paint brushes. In 1834 Hancock's London factory burned down and Macintosh had already closed the Glasgow factory, hence all the work transferred to Manchester. See the "Virtual Encyclopedia of Greater Manchester"〔(Papillon Graphics' Virtual Encyclopedia of Greater Manchester )〕
From then on, the manufacturing of "proper" raincoats or macs impervious to all weathers – constructed of two layers of rubber-coated cotton fabric or "double textured" – was concentrated, with all necessary expertise and experience, in Manchester or the Lancastrian cotton towns. There such rubber or rubberised products amounted to a "cottage industry", as confirmed by the abundance of company records in the National Archives at Kew, Surrey.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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