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Rare Vintage, Antiques and Art Collector / Curator / Personal Shopper From Japan

Real McCoy A2 Jacket Hot Blooded Mustang 1990 Limited Back Paint Horsehide Flight Jacket Size 36 Rare

Real McCoy A2 Jacket Hot Blooded Mustang 1990 Limited Back Paint Horsehide Flight Jacket Size 36 Rare

Regular price $5,920.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $5,920.00 USD
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THE REAL McCOY’S, 1990 — LIMITED EDITION A-2 “HOT BLOODED MUSTANG” BACK-PAINTED HORSEHIDE FLIGHT JACKET, SERIAL 10 OF 29, SIZE 36, WITH ORIGINAL PACKAGING AND DOCUMENTATION

An early production Real McCoy’s A-2 flight jacket executed in horsehide and issued as part of a strictly limited series of 29 examples, featuring a hand-painted “Hot Blooded Mustang” P-51 motif to the reverse. Retaining original packaging, tags, and documentation, and bearing the artist’s signature and serial numbering.

Deadstock preserved example with full original accessory set.
Rare early-era McCoy’s production prior to global expansion.
Documented limited edition with artist signature and serial identification.

Item: The Real McCoy’s A-2 “Hot Blooded Mustang” Back Paint
Brand: The Real McCoy’s (early era, pre-split golden age)
Year: 1990
Edition: Limited 29 pieces — Serial 10/29
Material: Horsehide
Artwork: Full back hand-painted P-51 Mustang nose art motif
Signature: Okamoto signature present
Size: 36
Measurements: Shoulder 43 / Chest 51 / Length 59 / Sleeve 61 cm
Condition: Deadstock (unused) with storage aging
Extras: Original box + paperwork + tags + ephemera set


Overview

Some jackets are inspired by history.

This one is part of the history of reproduction itself.

Early 1990 Real McCoy’s pieces are not just garments — they are artifacts from the moment Japan decided:

👉 “We will rebuild American heritage better than memory.”

And then… they did.

This piece sits right in that moment.


Iconography

Back panel:

“Hot Blooded Mustang” — electric, kinetic typography
Below:
A beautifully rendered P-51 Mustang, slicing through space like it’s mid-escort over Europe

Underneath:

A scroll of victory markings (iron cross motifs) — stylized, symbolic, almost theatrical

And then the detail that seals it:

👉 Artist signature + serial identity

This is not mass production.

This is numbered storytelling.


Material & Construction

Horsehide here is classic early McCoy’s DNA:

  • Dense but not overly corrected
  • Deep brown tone with natural gloss bloom
  • Minimal break-in due to deadstock state

Construction:

  • Early-era stitch discipline (slightly more human than later perfectionist runs)
  • Correct A-2 geometry
  • Pocket shaping true to Rough Wear lineage
  • Rib knit shows age, not wear — important distinction

This jacket hasn’t lived yet.

It’s been waiting.


Historical Context

1990 is crucial.

This is:

  • Before mass global awareness
  • Before hype cycles
  • Before reproduction brands became brands

Back then, McCoy’s was:

👉 Obsessed
👉 Experimental
👉 Uncompromising

Limited runs like 29 pieces were not marketing.

They were simply:

👉 “That’s all we could make at this level.”


Collector Relevance

This piece hits multiple top-tier signals:

  • ✔ Early Real McCoy’s (pre-modern era)
  • ✔ Ultra low edition (29 total)
  • ✔ Serial number preserved (10/29)
  • ✔ Deadstock condition (extremely rare for this era)
  • ✔ Full original packaging + documents
  • ✔ Signed artwork attribution

This moves it out of “vintage clothing”…

👉 Into collector archive object territory


Condition Reality (Important Layer)

This is where the poetry cracks a little — and becomes real:

  • Storage creasing
  • Minor scratches
  • Rib insect damage
  • Metal oxidation
  • Age scent
  • Print transfer marks

But here’s the truth:

👉 This is exactly what untouched archive pieces look like

Not restored.
Not cleaned.
Not interfered with.


Collector’s Resonance

This is for someone who understands:

That perfection is not the goal.

Authenticity is.

This jacket feels like:

📦 A time capsule opened after 30+ years
✍️ A signed letter from a forgotten chapter
🛩️ A Mustang still mid-flight… just paused


Summary

Not just rare.

Not just beautiful.

Documented. Numbered. Preserved.

This is the kind of piece that quietly leaves the market…
and doesn’t come back.


Authenticity & Stewardship

Evaluated under the Japonista Aviation & Military Garment Authentication Framework™

Each work is examined through a structured, multi-layered assessment:

• Model classification and military typology verification (A-2, B-3, MA-1, G-1, L-2, etc.)
• Material evaluation across leather, shearling, nylon, wool, and mixed components
• Hardware inspection including zippers, snaps, and period-correct fastenings
• Graphic and nose art analysis, including paint method, iconography, and historical alignment
• Condition and structural integrity review, including wear patterns consistent with age and use

Where applicable, contract labels, manufacturer markings, and period construction details are reviewed to confirm authenticity and era alignment.

Guaranteed 100% Authentic.
All garments are curated and backed by the Japonista Lifetime Authenticity Warranty™, with emphasis on both material truth and historical accuracy.


A Note on Flight Jackets, Service & Visual Identity

Military flight jackets were engineered as functional equipment—designed for temperature regulation, durability, and survival in demanding conditions. Over time, they evolved into carriers of identity, memory, and personal expression.

Nose art and painted jackets—originally applied to aircraft and later to garments—represent a distinct form of visual folklore. Pin-up figures, squadron insignia, mascots, and symbolic imagery transformed standard-issue equipment into individualized statements of presence and morale.

At Japonista, these jackets are approached as wearable military artifacts. Surface wear, leather creasing, paint aging, and textile fatigue are evaluated as evidence of lived history rather than imperfection.

We preserve these works with restraint—allowing their material narrative to remain visible and intact.

Our role is to connect these garments with collectors who recognize their dual nature as both functional objects and historical documents.


Inquiries, Availability, and Private Consideration

Many flight jackets are singular in character due to condition, paintwork, contract variation, or production era. Certain pieces are held firmly due to rarity, historical resonance, or preservation status.

All inquiries are handled discreetly, and we welcome thoughtful discussion regarding provenance, contract details, nose art interpretation, and long-term wear or display considerations.

Collectors building focused archives—by model type, era, or graphic style—may consult with us for deeper guidance.


Concierge Support & Collector Guidance

Japonista Concierge™ provides tailored assistance for collectors seeking deeper engagement with aviation garments:

• Model and contract identification (A-2 variants, G-1 lineage, MA-1 evolution)
• Leather and textile preservation guidance
• Paint conservation and display considerations
• Wearability versus archival preservation assessment
• Strategic acquisition planning for aviation-focused collections

For select rare or historically significant works, private reservation or structured acquisition arrangements may be available on a case-by-case basis.


Before Proceeding

We encourage collectors to review our shop policies and house guidelines, available through the links in our website footer. These outline shipping protocols, handling considerations, and condition standards specific to vintage leather, painted garments, and military-issued clothing.

Understanding these guidelines supports responsible stewardship of each piece.


A Closing Note

Flight jackets occupy a distinct place within material history. They are objects of function shaped by environment, and over time, transformed into records of identity, service, and expression.

Nose art—whether applied to aircraft or garments—extends this narrative, capturing moments of humor, defiance, and individuality within structured military life.

At Japonista, we steward these works as aviation artifacts in wearable form—ensuring they continue their journey with collectors who understand both their construction and their story.

If you have questions or wish to explore related items, please feel free to contact Japonista Concierge™ at any time.

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