Plan:
1. Copy existing jacket pattern to tissue paper. Will use tracing paper...
2. Build a jacket using some scrap stretchy fabric of some sort (not the fancy stuff, not exact stretch, but hopefully close), minus zipper!
3. Check fit.
4. Adjust fit, deconstruct adjusted jacket.
5. Transfer adjusted jacket to pattern
6. Build jacket with new fancy softshell.
Getting the collar length is going to be a bit of a challenge.
And I think the bottom of the jacket probably should be a straight line... I think I flipped the wedge part. I will have to watch that.... I guess I can cut the jacket slightly long and adjust the bottom, however, as it needs to fold back over on itself.
Someone's video on shortening a separating zipper.

@ai6yr open-lower-back wedge cut, tied with strings.
Go kink/medieval on that bitch.
@ai6yr DOOOOOO EEEEEEEEEEET. You WANT IT.
Search your feelings. You know it to be true.
@ai6yr BTW one of the weirdest but comfiest pieces of clothing I own is an odd combo/mix of rain shell and a short cloak. It has wide sleeves, a hood, and closes by buttons front of shoulder/collar bone, one of those turned inside (told you, weird)
It looks like something out of a new Star Wars movie set. I'd wear it more often, but I don't want to look TOO MUCH like a scifi movie extra, walking around.
@ai6yr make the collar a reversible hood.
The fastening in front must be loop n peg. Bonus for the teeth or claws of whatever tried to kill you last.
@ai6yr @mattblaze @CliffsEsport @EugestShirley @faraiwe
I sympathise; I was trained to regard the word plane as describing a flat surface, or a tool for making such. But also, I tried reading Beowulf once and it was ruddy impossible. At some point I think we have to concede the fluidity of language. The annoying thing is that it is allllmost static in the human lifespan.
@CliffsEsport @ai6yr @mattblaze @EugestShirley @faraiwe
Wow, interesting background. Yes. The more common error is saying "memory" and leaving the listener to guess from the context and amount described. The tricky thing, I find, is that as the rate of globalisation increases, and where English functions as a lingual franca, it is hard to begrudge those who don't speak English as a first language using words improperly. At that level I think "properly" is just whatever has an acceptable likelihood of arranging the neural pathways in my skull in the intended manner. No excuse for the rest of us, of course.