Archive for the 'yikes' Category

Skinny Jeans Could be Hazardous to your Health?!

girls-denim-jeans-venice-skinny-colors.jpg

Hipster jeans gave us the ”muffin top” and five-centimetre fly, while the super-tube left unsuspecting women exposed to ”camel toe” and ”crack flash”.

Now, it’s medical - the latest trendy denims are a  proven health hazard.

Devotees of the skinny jean may be unaware that cramming their bodies into tight denim can cause nasty damage to a sensory nerve under the hip bone, leaving the wearer with a tingling or burning sensation and numbness in the thigh.

The fashion affliction, which overseas has earned the nickname  ”Calvin Klein syndrome”, is known in medical circles as Meralgia paraesthetica.

Queensland General Practice president John Kastrissios said the condition was common among women who regularly wore tight, hip-hugging jeans.

”If you wear something very tight, especially low-cut, the superficial sensory nerve of the upper thigh can get compressed,” Dr Kastrissios said.

Compression of the peripheral nerve, the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve, could cause aching in the groin area and across the buttocks, he said.

”More common is the absence or impairment of feeling across the upper thigh, which can last up to six weeks,” Dr Kastrissios said.

The condition is usually not serious. In about 95 per cent of cases, symptoms will disappear without any need for medical treatment.

In rare instances, surgery may be required to decompress the nerve.

The condition was most common among slim women, whose sensory nerve was more superficial, but men were also affected, Dr Kastrissios said.

Worn by celebrity icons such as The Rolling Stones’ Mick Jagger and supermodel Kate Moss, skinny jeans traditionally taper to the ankle.

High-waisted styles are also in fashion.

Paula Acheson, owner of Paddington’s Petrol Boutique, said skinny jeans would continue to be women’s preferred denims, no matter the consequences.

”We would sell 10 pairs of skinny jeans to one wide-legged pair,” Ms Acheson said.

”They are definitely our highest selling item.”

University student Cassandra Peszko, 18, owns eight pairs of skinny jeans and was surprised to hear about the potential health risk.

”They are a staple item in my wardrobe,” Ms Peszko said.

”It could only be a matter of time before I can’t feel my leg.”

However, Ms Peszko, who also works as a promotional model, said she would continue to wear her favourite skinnies ”to death”.  Source

Hey - beauty is pain, right?  Why else would we wear 6 inch heels - not because they are comfortable! If you are wearing your jeans so tight that they compress a nerve, then they are maybe a little too tight.  But otherwise, long live skinnies.

Have you traded in your Designer Denim for Levi’s lately?

designer-jeans-shopping.jpg

We posted this article the other day about how some experts are saying the designer denim industry seems to defy the downturned economy.  Now this article by a fashion columnist says the opposite - that women are no longer buying as many luxe goods and that they are trading buying designer denim for cheaper brands.  What’s your take? 

Thanks to high gas prices and higher food prices, the days of the Starbucks-toting, gluttonous fashionista are over.

She’s stopped buying multiple pairs of $250 Citizens of Humanity jeans, opting instead for just one pair (well, maybe two) of $50 Levis.

She’ll buy $400 Christian Louboutins but will limit her color choice to black. And the $1,500 camel Chloe “It” bag has been replaced with a reasonable facsimile from Nine West.

Yes, the shopping habits that defined the most casual yet expensive era in women’s fashion are on the brink of extinction.

“People are shopping, but instead of choosing to go upscale for the simple things, they are going downscale,” said Kathryn Finney, who writes the Budget Fashionista, a New-York-based blog she began while living in Philadelphia.

“For a while, it was about mixing up the high and the low,” she said. “Now it’s all about the low.”

So, what exactly are we buying during these belt-tightening times?

After three summers of strong sales, the dress is still selling very well, said Marshal Cohen, market analyst for NPD Market Research. But the motivation behind purchasing the frocks, Cohen says, has changed from novel idea to necessity.

“Women bought them, first off, because they were fresh,” Cohen said. “But now it passes the complete-outfit test. It’s economical, and it will be strong into fall.”

But this fall the dress will be belted and in somber, matte shades. Gone are the crystals and fabric with sheen. Who says fashion doesn’t reflect real life?

The tight squeeze on the economy is forcing us to look at our finances, but it is also taking the whimsy out of fashion. Until now, fashion was not only a creative endeavor; it was a carefree pastime. Bargain-shopping - finding the best designer deals at Target and H&M - was a sport.

Well, the game is over. Gas prices have nearly tripled in the last three years, and our discretionary income is the victim. Bargain-shopping is a necessity. The heyday of luxury is gone.

Last month, 39 percent of 7,500 adults polled said higher gas prices have caused them to spend less on clothing, according to Big Research. That’s up almost 13 percentage points from the same time last year, when only 26.6 percent said their closets were affected by the fluctuating prices.

Oh, the sadness. There was something about finding fabulous dresses, wide-legged pants or dangling earrings for $150 or less - OK, that was my threshold for impulse shopping - and buying it spontaneously because we thought we deserved it.

So what’s a girl to do if she’s to stay chic?

Today, at least, there are more options. Unlike lean times that sent people to the sewing machine, our chic-for-less culture has created a bevy of places to shop. And according to Cohen, they are doing well and will continue to do so: Namely, the Forever 21s, Targets and Zaras of the world.

Even Wal-Mart is going beyond its basic George line to include a collection by California luxury designer Norma Kamali. Paige Premium Denim is now at T.J. Maxx. And more designers like Kate Spade and Alice + Olivia are having online sample sales.

Of course, there’s always consignment. Over the last four months, the Chestnut Street location of resale boutique Buffalo Exchange has seen a 30 percent increase in revenue over the previous year, said Leslie Weinstein, the store’s manager.

“We still have people come in looking for the great T-shirt and jeans,” Weinstein said. “But the volume of people has grown tremendously. We have more people looking for more value for their money.”

What does this mean for fashion?

There will always be people who can afford the best of everything - from a $250 Neal Sperling T-shirt to a $1,000 Pucci pantsuit.

But as our true necessities become more expensive, those of us who got a tiny taste of luxury may be forced to perk Maxwell House at home and dream about the Diane von Furstenberg dress.”

Pffft…personally, as a coffee snob as well as a designer denim snob, I could never drink Maxwell House. Ugh!  If I find myself broke, I’ll wear t-shirts from Walmart with my designer denim that I got on sale, whilst drinking my Starbucks, thank you very much!  A girl’s gotta draw the line somewhere! 

Have you changed your shopping habits for designer denim in this slower economy?

View Results

Loading ... Loading …

In lieu of hemming, Zakkerz your jeans!

instant-hem.jpg

From the latest People Style Watch - have you  heard of Zakkerz?  I think the concept is great, if the Zakkerz could be placed on the inside of the jeans where it doesn’t show…anyone tried these yet? 

Are we all just label whores?

Check out the following interesting blog we stumbled across. What’s your take on what this blogger has to say about designer denim and other designer goods?

A recent headline in our local paper announced that a retail store in a local upscale mall had been raided by police. Apparently they were selling fake designer clothing. As I read this story I wondered if other people were struck by the same thoughts as I had.

First, the idea of paying $300 for a pair of jeans just so you can have Dolce and Gabbana displayed across your butt seems ludicrous to me. The fake jeans were, according to the article, “almost indistinguishable from the real thing; you’d have to know what to look for”. Then what, exactly, are people paying the $300 for? I mean, if I can find a pair of jeans that looks the same, feels the same, wears the same and is worth less than a third of the cost - (and we know they’re all made in the same overseas sweatshops) then what is all that extra money for?

Advertising is expensive, right? And yet people willingly turn themselves into walking billboards by displaying logos on their clothing. If you knew it cost a company $5,000 to paint their logo on the side of a car, wouldn’t you feel cheated that you had to pay THEM for the privilege of wearing their logo on your personage?

Ask folks why they wear this stuff and they’ll say they want to appear fashionable, cool, as having good taste. But really, let’s be honest here. It’s a status symbol. Having a Louis Vuitton purse apparently screams “I have so much money I can blow $5000 on a purse”. More likely it says “I’m so insecure that I blew $5000 I didn’t really have in order to impress people”.

What I also find interesting is that people willingly seek out designer fakes. It’s huge business all around the developed world. The better the fake, the more people want it. What this says to me is that people aren’t buying the real stuff for any other reason than to impress others and if they can find a good fake that won’t be apparent they are more than happy to don the fake item and save their money.

The headline story read as though a grievous crime had been committed. But I think the joke is on the consumers. AFAIC, anybody who is shallow enough to spend ten times the money on an article of clothing simply because of the name deserves to be fleeced if they can’t even figure out that the fake they bought is fake (after all, if it’s truly an issue of quality then shouldn’t it be obvious? I don’t know much about designers but I can hold a cheap suit next to a Zegna suit and feel right away that there’s a big difference). I also think the people making the fakes should be quietly applauded for revealing the ridiculousness of the whole designer label industry. The fact that good fakes require trained detectives to distinguish them from the real thing and the low cost of making those fakes is a blatant revelation of the fleece job consumers are subjected to by the pricing of these designer items. Those $300 jeans likely cost no more to make than the $150 fakes did (which are already marked up by about 300%).

I just can’t believe this story made headlines. Surely there is more important stuff going on in the world than this.”

Its funny because our guess is many people feel this way and buy fakes, thinking no one can tell the difference. But we (the HonestForum & DenimBlog community) know better, that there is a BIG difference in quality, the way they feel and look - and most fakes LOOK fake. The authentic jeans do cost more to manufacture than the fakes too, although this blogger apparently thinks otherwise (if they don’t claim to know much about designer goods, how can they make a statement like that?) Many designer jeans are sanded and dyed by hand, not created through child labor. For us, its not about impressing someone because we wear nice jeans or carry a designer handbag, its about enjoying the quality of a high end product, the way it looks and feels. Its the fake-makers that employ child laborers in sweatshops and support crime and terrorism. Don’t buy fakes!

Don’t get lured to a Jeans Party!

designer denim back pockets

Have you heard about the popularity of the new “jeans parties”? They are poping up everywhere like Tupperware parties, including on many college campuses. Like purse parties, 99% of the time, they are full of knockoffs. Don’t get sucked in - no one looks good in fakes! Remember, if the price seems to good to be true, it usually is.

Check out the discussion on this on the HonestForum.

New Marc Jacob shoes…would you wear these with your designer denim?

Marc Jacobs shoes woa

Debuted on the runway on September 12th at Marc Jacob’s preview Spring show which featured everything backwards…. Some things should just stay on the runway, but we’d love to see how the models actually walked in these!

The show was attended by several celebrities including Victoria Beckham and Mischa Barton. Models pranced down the runway in an array of rather unwearable items, including these “backward heels” - wow! Would you wear these if you saw them in a store?

About Us

TheDenimBlog.com is a designer jeans blog brought to you by the creators of the #1 forum on the web for designer jeans. Learn more about us.

send tips about designer jeans to editor@denimblog.com
  • Categories



  • welovedenim.com





    Important Posts

    Pay Safely With Paypal