A field jacket from Drake's is not a subtle object. This one is even less subtle than most, and that's the point.
The Verdict
At $895, this is a considered piece of outerwear for someone who wants their denim jacket to read as clothing rather than casualwear. The construction earns the price. The look does not work for everyone, and Drake's knows that.
The Make
The fabric is the argument. The denim is 14.2oz, woven and dyed in Japan, with a vertical indigo stripe that sits somewhere between workwear and something you'd find in a Milanese archive sale. For reference, most off-the-rack denim jackets run 11-12oz; 14.2oz has real body, holds structure without a liner doing the work, and will fade in ways that are worth paying attention to.
Construction is thorough. Eight pockets in total: two front patch, two back patch, hidden ticket pockets on the interior, and twin internal patch pockets. The corduroy spread collar is a good call against the denim, softening what could have been a workwear pastiche. Raglan shoulders keep the silhouette clean from the back without a seam breaking the stripe. The check-pattern lining and tan contrast stitching are details that show up when someone looks closely, which is when it matters. Silver-tone hardware is logo-engraved, which is restrained for a brand at this price. Made in Portugal, from Japanese fabric. The supply chain is honest about where the value is.
The Fit
The cut is relaxed, which on a 14.2oz denim jacket means it has weight and presence without pulling across the chest or back. Drake's sizing runs true, and the XS-to-XXL range is wider than most at this tier. If you're layering a midlayer underneath, stay with your standard size. The raglan construction gives enough room across the shoulder that sizing up is rarely necessary.
The Context
This sits at the top of what a denim jacket can cost before it becomes a leather jacket conversation. Visvim makes comparable structured denim outerwear at higher prices; Levi's Vintage Clothing makes the LVC Type III at around $250 with comparable fabric weight but none of the pocket architecture or tailored details. The Drake's piece is for someone who has already resolved the denim jacket question at lower price points and wants to resolve it permanently. The stripe pattern scores a 7 out of 10 on any honest loud-to-subtle scale. You are not hiding this jacket.
The Personal Note
I haven't owned this one. My read is that the fabric and construction are genuine, and the stripe asks a real question about your wardrobe before you buy it. If the answer is yes, the price holds. If you're unsure, spend the $250 on the LVC and see how much you reach for it.



