I am interested in Ted Williams gloves. I have a couple of really nice ones in my modest collection. As has been stated in other venues, the leather is not the greatest, and the designs seem just a little bit "off" in some ways. However, there were a jillion of them made for Sears, and the Williams name added some panache, I am sure.
From the little bit of information I have picked up over the past couple of years, the Model 400 was the flagship of the line, akin to Wilson's A2000 and the Rawlings HOH lines, though certainly not of the same quality as either of those. It was what it was: a fairly nice glove at a reasonable price. Compared to the Williams models I own, the pictures here seem to show a better balanced front (almost Wilson or McGregor shaped) with the characteristic double row of lacing in the palm. The wingback is something I had not seen before, but notice the welting on the backs of the fingers: it is rolled and covered, or piped. Like most Williams gloves, it has too much web for my tastes; it looks as if it would be stiff and tough to close to me, as are mine.
To me, the patch with the embroidered autograph of Ted Williams is the selling point of any Williams glove. And I have seen them in black and green, black and red, white and black, black and gold, and on the Hall of Fame model, PURPLE!

Yes, I still have my first glove.