- A John Lennon Funko Pop Chase Figure - Funko Shop Exclusive.
- IMAGINE the new John Lennon pea coat Chase figure in your collection.
- New, near-mint condition. Stock photos are used in the listing.
- John arrives in a clear EcoTek premium 0.50MM protective display.
Funko released The Beatles (Yellow Submarine) Pop! figures in 2012 / 2013. The second figure features John Lennon from his solo career in a military jacket, and the third figure features John in a pea coat - a Funko store exclusive.
1979 John Lennon found his fur-lined peacoat at the now-defunct NYC boutique Charivari in New York City.
The name "peacoat" comes from the Dutch word "pije," which describes a coat made from coarse wool. Eventually, the British navy inherited the pea coat, which caused it to become extremely popular.
Another theory, favored by the US Navy, is that the heavy topcoat worn in cold, miserable weather by seafaring men was once tailored from "pilot cloth" - a heavy, coarse, stout kind of twilled blue cloth with the nap on one side. This was sometimes called P-cloth from the initial letter of the pilot, and the garment made from it was called a P-jacket - later a pea coat. The term has been used since 1723 to denote coats made from that cloth.
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- Description
- A John Lennon Funko Pop Chase Figure - Funko Shop Exclusive.
- IMAGINE the new John Lennon pea coat Chase figure in your collection.
- New, near-mint condition. Stock photos are used in the listing.
- John arrives in a clear EcoTek premium 0.50MM protective display.
Funko released The Beatles (Yellow Submarine) Pop! figures in 2012 / 2013. The second figure features John Lennon from his solo career in a military jacket, and the third figure features John in a pea coat - a Funko store exclusive.
1979 John Lennon found his fur-lined peacoat at the now-defunct NYC boutique Charivari in New York City.
The name "peacoat" comes from the Dutch word "pije," which describes a coat made from coarse wool. Eventually, the British navy inherited the pea coat, which caused it to become extremely popular.
Another theory, favored by the US Navy, is that the heavy topcoat worn in cold, miserable weather by seafaring men was once tailored from "pilot cloth" - a heavy, coarse, stout kind of twilled blue cloth with the nap on one side. This was sometimes called P-cloth from the initial letter of the pilot, and the garment made from it was called a P-jacket - later a pea coat. The term has been used since 1723 to denote coats made from that cloth.