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‎06-22-2014 07:11 PM
‎06-22-2014 10:10 PM
‎06-22-2014 10:29 PM
even buying them for a 100 bucks is against why the pants were made in the first place.......they were a cheap alternative to the pants of the time.........they stood up to the environment, and the work that was being done...........double stitched, riveted pockets, button fly.............jeans ARE Americana......they are every bit the American icon as Uncle Sam and mom's apple pie.....they should be made in the US..............................raven
‎06-22-2014 10:31 PM
I do love my jeans. But $350 to get an American made pair? Not in my budget at the moment, or in the future. Sad indeed.
‎06-22-2014 10:37 PM
‎06-22-2014 10:38 PM
‎06-23-2014 01:09 AM
Nothing I wear cost anywhere close to $350, but I haven't bought a new pair of hockey skates for many years now. Fact I still have a pair I've only worn about 3 times. The old ones still are holding up just fine after years of use and abuse.
All the clothes I wear in a week probably didn't cost me more than $100.
‎06-23-2014 01:37 AM
Glenn B*ck, the radio talk show guy (webbie won't let me use his name) started a company called "1791" and they make 100% American made jeans, from the material used to the way the jeans are manufactured. They range from $160-$190. Here is a little story about them:
Glenn found that jeans, an iconic American product, were no longer being made in America.
A year later and the jeans are finally ready. The premium 100% cotton ring-spun selvedge jeans are 100% “Made in the USA”. They are woven in Greensboro, NC at Cone Denim ™ Mills, and are cut and sewn in Kentucky at a factory established in the 1920s.
In a profile of Cone Denim ™ Mills, Businessweek explained the appeal of selvedge jeans:
Aficionados crave “selvage,” or “self-edge,” jeans, which are more durable than the modern variety and develop a kind of patina over time. They’re made on narrower fly-shuttle looms that create a continuous, un-cut edge—something jeans devotees can tell instantly from the characteristic edging inside the legs or when the bottoms are rolled up. These jeans began disappearing in the 1970s as U.S. mills switched to high-speed looms to compete with fabric going into cheap apparel. The newer machines operated much faster but produced a less idiosyncratic product. More recently, Japanese companies discovered a market for old-fashioned jeans, which have since caught on with hipsters around the world. White Oak stays open by “targeting a niche business,” says Kenneth Kunberger, International Textile’s chief operating officer. “The only place in the world where these Draper fly-shuttle looms are running right now is right here.”
‎06-23-2014 10:27 AM
My husband wear Carhartt. Made in the USA and cost $29.00
I'd never buy jeans $350. But, Cowboy boots that's a different story
‎06-23-2014 11:07 AM
I saw that segment. I would not spend $350 no matter where those jeans are made.
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