/
DE

Baracuta Bags 3 Items

Bags 3 Tote Bags 3
Hide Filter & Categories Show Filter & Categories
Filter Results
Brand
Brand
adidas Spezial
Adsum
and wander
Arc'teryx
Arte Antwerp
Baracuta
Barbour
Battenwear
Beams Japan
Beams Plus
Butter Goods
Carhartt WIP
Chrome Industries
CMF Outdoor Garment
Corridor
côte&ciel
Daily Paper
Dickies
Edwin
Epperson Mountaineering
F/CE
Filson
Fjällräven
Fred Perry
FREITAG
Goldwin
Good Morning Tapes
Gramicci
have a good time
HEIMPLANET
Heresy
HHV
Magic Castles
Maharishi
nanamica
New Amsterdam Surf Association
Norse Projects
Oakley
ORTLIEB
Osprey
Parel Studios
Patagonia
pinqponq
Polo Ralph Lauren
Porter-Yoshida & Co.
Puebco
Puma
Salomon
Snow Peak
The North Face
The Trilogy Tapes
thisisneverthat
Y-3
YETI
Close
Sale
Sale
No Sale Items
All Sale Items
Up to 30%
Close
New In Stock
New In Stock
180 Days
365 Days
Close
Baracuta
Back To Top

Baracuta Bags

The Baracuta history goes back to the year 1912, when the Miller family started producing rain jackets in Manchester, UK. Back in 1937, the two brothers John and Isaac Miller designed the original version of the legendary G9 blouson to protect golf players from rain, and around the same time, the Millers renamed the Baracuta factory. The Baracuta G9 immediately enjoyed great popularity, thanks to the innovative zip closure, the perfect cut, the signature wing-back umbrella, the unique collar as well as the distinctive Fraser Tartan lining, given to the Millers by Lord Fraser and the unmistakable umbrella yoke motif on the back. In the 1950s, Baracuta managed to get a distribution deal for the United States, henceforth many celebs sported this fresh UK jacket. In 1964, the G9 became universally known as the Harrington, thanks to the popularity of Ryan O’Neal wearing it as the character of Rodney Harrington in the TV series “Peyton Place”. Soon, the Baracuta G9 was renamed Harrington while the demand exploded. Later, since the late-1960s to be exact, Baracuta’s Harrington jacket became a standard garment within different UK sub-cultures including the Mod movement, skinheads and early punk-rockers after The Clash sported it during a 1981 gig in Times Square. And in the 1990, the opinion leaders of the Brit pop/indie rock culture never left their houses without this iconic design. It also didn’t hurt the popularity of the Harrington G9, when James Bond actor Daniel Craig brought the Harrington jacket to the big screen in the 2008 movie, “Quantum of Solace”.