Our model shows us how well her Hudson Jeans fit. These baby bootcut skinny jeans hug the figure creating an all round great silhouette. For more Hudson Jeans any many more premium denim brands visit www.jeanography.com
Tag Archive: Skinny
www.jeantheory.com Learn the difference between skinny jeans, straightleg and bootcut jeans in today’s jeans education moment. Happy Thanksgiving 2011 weekend, and here’s to your painless jeans shopping experience! (and for my regular followers, when I’m not singing or traveling, I’m working at my good friend’s designer jeans store. For better or worse, this is my second most popular youtube clip. Go figure!)
ClintonCharlie© 2009
Jordache originated in 1969, when brothers Joe, Ralph, and Avi Nakash (Naccache) opened a store in New York City that sold brand-name jeans at a discount.[1] Within a few years, their business had expanded to a four-store chain.[1] In 1977, however, the brothers’ largest store was looted and set ablaze during the New York City blackout of 1977.[1] When they collected $120000 on their insurance policy, they incorporated their business (in 1978) and entered the jeans manufacturing business.[1] They had long been interested in the European denim market, where jeans were more body-conscious and fashion-forward.[1] The Nakashes’ timing was right. At this moment, consumers tastes in jeans were shifting from established brands like Levi’s to designer jeans like Gloria Vanderbilt and Calvin Klein.[1] Jordache jeans themselves, however, were barely distinguishable from other designer jeans on the market.[1] To set their brand apart, the brothers plowed one quarter of their annual sales volume ($300000 of their own money and $250000 in loans) into an aggressive 1979 ad campaign.[1] Jordache produced a television commercial starring an apparently topless woman in tight Jordache jeans riding a horse through the surf.[1][2] The ad was rejected by all three major television networks, but independent New York stations aired it, and Jordache surged to popularity.[1][2] One million dollars more was spent on advertising after this, including full-color ads in national magazines.[1] One …