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Icons Only: From Glastonbury to Balmoral, Barbour’s Wax Jacket Is an Unlikely Fashion Icon

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The Barbour wax jacket is far more than just a wet-weather staple. It’s about as British as pie and mash and beloved by everyone from the royal family to It girls at Glastonbury. Synonymous with the English country-dwelling upper classes, it’s a symbol of heritage and tradition, and over the years, its appeal has widened to make it a most unlikely fashion icon.

Barbour’s long relationship with waxed cotton began back in 1894, when Scotsman John Barbour opened a shop in the Market Place in Newcastle’s South Shields, selling practical and hard-wearing oilskins for hunting and fishing. Strictly utilitarian, the jackets featured pockets for storing cartridges, “thorn-proof” wax coating for scrambling through brambles and even large game pockets capable of storing an entire pheasant.