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Old Riding Fads you love

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  • #21
    Amen to all of the above - PLUS:

    Plain Brown Flat nosebands and browbands!

    In real traditional English leather - easy to clean and oil and aging gracefully into a lovely soft, supple contour of your favorite horse's face. With a deep rich patenia.

    And they never wear out.

    Sigh. The good old days with Outside courses, Handy Hunter classes and horses that went from the hunt field to the show ring and back all the time. And more than 15 braids in a mane was very fancy.

    Baker blankets that were still 100% wool.

    Instuctors who yelled at you, but weren't mean, just emphatic!

    Devilish Shetland Ponies who taught kids to ride "Thelwell" style and the parents and instructors who let them!

    SCFarm
    The above post is an opinion, just an opinion. If it were a real live fact it would include supporting links to websites full of people who already agreed with me.

    www.southern-cross-farm.com

    Comment


    • #22
      Actually I still have and use my Ulster boots (I always did prefer them over Hampa). I even have a few pairs that say "made in West Germany".

      I also still ride in a fitted dressage pad. Most of my horses are short coupled and look ridiculous in a large square pad, plus I just think fitted pads look better. They are harder to find, so I hoard them...but I have also had them custom made, and it wasn't any more than buying a nice, new square pad.

      Anyone remember nickel hardware? Not that I miss it too much, but I definitely remember spending hours trying to polish it up!

      Comment


      • #23
        I decided recently that I'm going to personally try to bring back Ulster boots and Navajo Pads. So far it's only George(my horse) and I sporting the look.

        Comment


        • #24
          I have Hampas, and love them. My friend just got a pair of Ulster open fronts for her pony. I'd love to find the old closed front Hampa style again. I wish they still made them.

          I'd say that is my "only" because I'm still fairly young.

          I do hae a bridle with a "flat plain" browband and figure 8 (the Beval Hunterdon) and I think it is just lovely.

          What does "sewn in reins" mean? And "sewn in bridles"?

          Comment


          • #25
            Beautiful old Locke helmets, faded grey. Everything about appointments classes...buttons on breeches just so..boot guards..Newmarkets!..string gloves under folded girths...patent leather boot tops..flat sewn in tack. Pretty old double bridles..and the educated hands to use them! REAL brass, leather, fleece everything..right down to your leather handled brass sweatscraper, polished and hung by your horse's heavily lacquered stall screen each night. Bakers, hand knotted raw silk stock ties...getting blooded, earning your colours..walking your pony up the ramp off 7th Avenue..the smell of the tanbark at the old Garden....realizing all the horses on the van that shipped your cheap ol' Maclay horse in are Mrs. Randolph's famous hunters!! Petting them!!...sorry...can't help myself. You kids don't know what you're missing
            http://community.webshots.com/user/racetb

            *Save The Prairie Dog*
            \"Jean Louise, stand up. Your father\'s passing.\"

            Comment


            • #26
              <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by RegentLion:
              What does "sewn in reins" mean? And "sewn in bridles"? </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

              Where the hook stud or buckle ends on your reins and cheek peices are now, the ends of the leather were actually sewn together, so they were not removable. They also couldn't break as easily and since the leather seemed to last so much longer, it didn't really matter they couldn't be removed.

              Comment


              • #27
                <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by lizathenag:
                not using a saddle pad because your saddle fit!!!

                flat sewn-in bridle

                plaited rein for the snaffle on the pelham </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

                Had nothing to do with the saddle fitting or not! It was the fashion of the time, so everyone fell in line.
                Laurie

                Comment


                • #28
                  I loved my paisley choker, velvet color and silver buttons.
                  \"Riding a horse is not a gentle hobby, to be picked up and laid down like a game of solitaire. It is a grand passion. It seizes a person whole and, once it has done so, he will have to accept that his life will be radically changed.\" -- Ralph Waldo E

                  Comment


                  • #29
                    This will date me! Breeches that puffed out at the thigh. Doesn't it figure they were in when I weighed 100 lbs. soaking wet and now that I need them, they're out.

                    Comment


                    • #30
                      I never liked the flaired breeches, although I loved my skin-tight stretchy Harry Halls when I was 100 lbs!
                      \"Riding a horse is not a gentle hobby, to be picked up and laid down like a game of solitaire. It is a grand passion. It seizes a person whole and, once it has done so, he will have to accept that his life will be radically changed.\" -- Ralph Waldo E

                      Comment


                      • #31
                        What if you wanted to change bits on a sewn in bridle? Did you just un sew and re sew?

                        Comment


                        • #32
                          <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by RegentLion:
                          What does "sewn in reins" mean? And "sewn in bridles"? </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

                          It is when the reins are literally sewn onto the bit instead of atteched with a buckle or a hook and stud attachment. A "sewn in" bridle is when both reins and cheek peices are attached the same way. The Bradoon strap is also sewn in on a double bridle.

                          It harkens back to tack custom made to each horse and quality leather that lasted long enough to outlast the horse.

                          SCFarm
                          The above post is an opinion, just an opinion. If it were a real live fact it would include supporting links to websites full of people who already agreed with me.

                          www.southern-cross-farm.com

                          Comment


                          • #33
                            <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by RegentLion:
                            What if you wanted to change bits on a sewn in bridle? Did you just un sew and re sew? </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

                            I suppose you could....but in my memory, most horses had a snaffle bridle and a full bridle and that was it. There weren't as many bit choices as there are now, IIRC. It's an open question as to whether all the choices are necessarily a good thing.

                            Comment


                            • #34
                              Oh, I feel old just thinking about it...

                              ...AKA, the 70's era
                              * Brown Harry Hall coat w/ brown velvet lapels
                              * Matching brown velvet helmet (no safety harness)
                              * Brown Marlboro boots
                              * String gloves
                              * Carnary yellow & rust colored breeches
                              * My first rolled bridle (it was the rage!)
                              * Showing w/o saddle pad
                              * Baker blankets
                              * Custom wool show blankets w/ your intials sewn on the flank, fancy braiding on the rear-end, leather closures on the front
                              * Showing in a field, not a ring for both flat and O/F classes
                              "You gave your life to become the person you are right now. Was it worth it?" Richard Bach

                              Comment


                              • #35
                                <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by daytimedrama:
                                I decided recently that I'm going to personally try to bring back Ulster boots and Navajo Pads. So far it's only George(my horse) and I sporting the look. </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

                                Show sported Ulsters (In all his Ulster glory) for a few months until the top part of the boot started rubbing his tendon weird. Dumb sensitive horse. I LOVE my Ulsters...have three pairs, even.

                                As for the navajo...eh, used those until about 2 years ago. These days, Show's saddle fits so well, I simply can't use one.
                                Keith: "Now...let's do something normal fathers and daughters do."
                                Veronica: "Buy me a pony?"

                                Comment


                                • #36
                                  I just gave me velvet collared hunt coat to some kid bout 5 yrs ago. Broke my heart it is a harry hall...sniff sniff.
                                  course the Rust breeches, hunt caps with the ribbon hanging down of course to prove you've 'made it' past beginner level.
                                  I wonder if my name plate belt is stil at my dad's would have to update it ( I can still fit in mine havent gained an ounce since i was 13 cept when preg) by a couple 3 or 4 horses...
                                  Friend of bar .ka

                                  Comment


                                  • #37
                                    TB's in the show ring.

                                    Solid legs over fences. Heels down, of course.

                                    Following release in the air.

                                    When buying your first OTTB to re-train yourself was a rite of passage.

                                    Appointments classes (those were so much fun to compete in!).

                                    And the navajo pads. I still have a stack washed and folded, waiting for that fad to return!
                                    "Whether you think you can or think you can't, you are right." -Henry Ford

                                    Comment


                                    • #38
                                      I still use navajo pads! Pure wool only. Best thing for the horse's back. I remember when I brought my daughter for her first Pony Club mounted meeting, the other kids asked "Are you riding western?" "No." "So why do you have a western pad?" I can't believe these kids have never seen anyone use a navajo blanket under an english saddle. Sheesh!
                                      blogging at HN: http://www.horsenation.com/
                                      check out my writing: http://jeseymour.com
                                      Just out: http://www.barkingrainpress.org/dd-p...ead-poisoning/

                                      Comment


                                      • #39
                                        Pocket (saddle) pads for Steuben saddle, not made anymore. I have seen pocketpads in Dover and State Line but they do not fit Steubens.

                                        My husband loves them, we still have some but they are wearing out. I have repaired my husbands so many times. Now he has come up with the brilliant idea that I should make them myself. That is where I draw the line!!!

                                        Comment


                                        • #40
                                          I love flat tack with a big wide nose band on larger boned heads. I love braided reins. I love rust breeches. I love plaid jackets. I also love when children on ponies wear low boots and garters. We were NEVER allowed tall boots on small or medium ponies.

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