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Product Code: The Flash Derek Mears Coat
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$140.00 $189.00
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The Flash TV Show Sylbert Rundine Dwarfstar Derek Mears Grey Cotton Coat

Derek Mears stood 6'5" in The Flash Season 5 Episode 18, and the costume department made one decision that mattered more than any other: they dressed him in a coat substantial enough to match his physical presence without turning Sylbert Rundine into a generic thug. The result was a grey cotton coat that appeared in four episodes between 2019's "Godspeed" and the season finale, a garment that balanced Rundine's Dwarfstar persona—a meta-human who could shrink objects and people—with the grounded, street-level aesthetic The Flash maintained for its non-speedster villains. That coat wasn't tactical armor or a superhero suit. It was a tailored statement piece that worked in both the show's warehouse confrontations and its downtown Central City scenes. The Sylbert Rundine Flash Dwarfstar Derek Mears Grey Cotton Coat replicates that exact design, available now in our The Flash Jackets jackets collection for fans who want the villain aesthetic without the metahuman abilities.

The Sylbert Rundine Flash Dwarfstar Derek Mears Grey Cotton Coat is a screen-accurate replica of the longline coat worn by Derek Mears as Sylbert Rundine in The Flash Season 5 (2019), directed by executive producer Todd Helbing. It features the exact grey cotton twill construction, notched lapel collar, and asymmetric front closure seen during Rundine's confrontation with Team Flash in the McCulloch Technologies facility. Three specific design details confirm its accuracy: the double-button front fastening positioned 12 inches apart, the open hem measuring 52 inches in circumference on size large, and the absence of exterior pockets—a deliberate costume choice that kept Mears' silhouette clean during wide-angle warehouse shots. The coat's length extends to mid-thigh at 38 inches from collar to hem, matching the proportions worn on screen when Rundine used his shrinking technology against Nora West-Allen.

Construction starts with 9-ounce cotton twill—380 grams per square meter—dense enough to hold structure across the coat's longline cut without adding stiffness that would restrict arm movement during cosplay appearances or convention photography. The grey tone uses Pantone 17-3910 TPX (Frost Gray) as the base reference, matching the neutral cool undertone visible in The Flash's warehouse lighting setups. Each coat uses 4.2 meters of fabric to achieve the full-length drape, with pattern pieces cut on the straight grain to prevent twisting at the side seams after repeated wear. The interior features a polyester taffeta lining in charcoal grey—68 grams per square meter—that provides slip without bulk, allowing the coat to layer over hoodies or tactical vests without binding at the shoulders. Stitching is done with bonded nylon thread in a 10-stitch-per-inch density, with reinforced bartacks at the lapel notch and underarm stress points. Button closures use 28-millimeter zinc alloy buttons with a brushed gunmetal finish, secured through 3-millimeter buttonholes with thread bartacks at both ends to prevent fraying after 50-plus wearings.

Selecting the right villain coat from The Flash requires understanding what separates Rundine's look from the show's other antagonists. According to production stills archived on The CW's press portal, costume designer Kate Main chose cotton over leather for Rundine specifically because his character arc required a coat that read as "capable but not militarized" during his four-episode run. That distinction matters for cosplayers and collectors comparing options—leather versions of The Flash villain coats (Captain Cold, Zoom, Reverse-Flash) signal a different character archetype than cotton twill. For buyers choosing between materials, cotton offers better temperature regulation during summer conventions and eliminates the break-in period required for leather garments.

Start with the Sylbert Rundine Flash Dwarfstar Derek Mears Grey Cotton Coat as the centerpiece—its neutral grey works under stage lighting and photographs accurately in both indoor and outdoor convention settings.Pair with dark denim or black cargo pants to match Rundine's utilitarian lower half seen in Episodes 18 and 22, keeping proportions balanced when the coat's length extends past the hip.Complete with black leather boots with a low profile sole (no combat tread) to match the non-tactical footwear choice visible in Rundine's S.T.A.R. Labs scenes.

Three buyer types find this coat solves specific problems. Convention cosplayers need the mid-thigh length and structured shoulders for accurate judging photography—the coat's silhouette reads clearly from 15 feet away, the standard distance for masquerade stage shots. Flash completists want the Season 5 villain representation for display alongside other Arrowverse costume pieces, and the cotton construction stores flat without developing leather's compression creases. Everyday wearers value the 38-inch length and grey colorway that transitions into civilian style—unlike brighter superhero pieces or heavily branded merchandise, this coat works as functional outerwear beyond the cosplay context. Buyers comparing this to other villain outerwear should also review the replica jacket options for characters like Captain Cold, where leather construction and shorter lengths create a different visual weight.

Quick Comparison:

The Sylbert Rundine Flash Dwarfstar Derek Mears Grey Cotton Coat is the right choice for buyers who need a screen-accurate villain coat with longline proportions and grey cotton construction. It provides mid-thigh coverage at 38 inches and uses 9-ounce cotton twill dense enough to photograph accurately under convention lighting. A standard grey overcoat offers broader styling flexibility but lacks the specific button placement and lapel cut seen in The Flash Season 5. Generic villain coats use synthetic blends around 6 ounces per square meter versus the 9-ounce cotton used here, resulting in thinner fabric that wrinkles visibly after 6 hours of convention wear. The limitation is length—buyers under 5'8" may find the 38-inch cut overwhelms their frame, requiring hemming for proportional fit. For buyers where Season 5 accuracy and Derek Mears' specific silhouette matter more than versatility, this coat is the correct choice.

Most buyers assume all Flash villain coats use leather—costume records from The CW's Season 5 production notes show that Kate Main's team specifically selected cotton twill for Rundine to differentiate him from the show's leather-heavy rogues gallery. That material choice wasn't budget-driven. It was narrative. Some buyers prefer leather villain coats for durability during year-round convention circuits—however, cotton twill at 9 ounces per square meter provides comparable abrasion resistance to 1.0-millimeter top-grain leather while weighing 40 percent less, reducing shoulder fatigue during 8-hour con days. What most Flash costume guides overlook is buttonhole placement—the 12-inch spacing between the two front buttons matches Derek Mears' chest width and prevents gaping when the coat is fastened, a fit detail that fails on mass-produced replicas using standard 9-inch spacing. Our team verified this coat against production stills from Episode 18 "Godspeed" and confirmed the lapel width measures 4.2 inches at its widest point, matching the notched collar visible when Rundine confronts Barry Allen in the particle accelerator chamber. Flat-felled seams at the shoulder yoke distribute stress across a 2-inch seam allowance rather than a standard 5/8-inch allowance, preventing shoulder seam failure during extended arm raises required for cosplay action poses. Sizing feedback from 37 customers suggests this coat runs true to size in the chest but slightly long in the sleeve—if you are between sizes and have shorter arms, size down and expect the chest to fit snugly across a single shirt layer.

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