International Code Signal Flag Nautical Belt with Leather Tabs

International Code Signal Flag Nautical Belt with Leather Tabs
Processing...
Product Code: PRP240FLAGS
Shipping Weight: 0.50 lbs

$39.95

YOUR BELT SIZE IS NOT YOUR PANT SIZE. SEE SIZING GUIDELINES BELOW.


Product Description

•••••

Skipjack's nautical code signal flags belt...the perfect accompaniment for khakis, jeans, or corduroys and of course to wear with your favorite worn cargo shorts too! This belt for all seasons has full grain drum-dyed leather billet and buckle ends accentuated by the solid brass buckle. This belt is available with your choice of red, white, or navy cotton webbing as a background to the multi-colored signal flag ribbon.

Belt measures 1.25" wide. MADE IN THE USA!

Nautical Signal Flag Belt

In stock sizes are available from 32 to 48 in even sizes at our mid-coast Maine showroom and ready for shipment through this webstore. Smaller and larger sizes are not available.

Click here to browse our selection of nautical belts!


HOW TO MEASURE YOUR BELT SIZE

Note: Tab style belts come in even sizes and are measured from the end of the buckle prong to the middle hole on the leather tab. Our use of the term 'size' refers to the measurement of the belt taken from the middle of 5 holes and includes the amount added by the buckle to the belt's effective length.

To estimate the correct size of your new tab style belt you may use any of the following methods:

Measure a belt that you already have. Lay out the belt and measure the distance from the hole at which you wear it to where that hole will sit on the tongue or prong of the buckle when fastened. This establishes the optimum size and will be the middle hole of your new belt. Subtract 2" to this number for your belt size.

Or, if ordering by pant size, add two inches to pant size (which refers to waist measurement) to allow for the fact that the belt goes over clothing. Most commonly, a person who thinks of himself as a size 36 for trousers will be a size 38 in our belt. Given the different ways people wear pants today, this may not be the most accurate method.