As
I get ready to watch tonight’s episode of the HBO’s series, "How to make it in America," I start to contemplate about fashionistas, hipsters, style,
entrepreneurship and of course jeans. Especially, since I recently bought a pair of
Diesels and Replays. I love Italian denim and I will admit, I can be
somewhat of a jean snob but with a cheap conscious of course, which allows me
to sniff out the sales. Anyway, I digress, How
to make it in America; a story about two young gentlemen who risk it all to start their own jean company, inspires me to want to create my own brand of jeans
just for the love of a good pair of denim with my name on it.
Since Levi Strauss & Co.'s gave birth to the jean in the mid 1800’s, jeans have
transformed and transpired throughout the generations. No longer do cowboys and
gold miners roam the Wild West carrying saddlebags and wearing dusty denim with
patented copper rivets reinforcing the points of strain, touting a Colt 45
pistol, riding horse back. Those days are long gone. Now teens and young adults
are wearing all types of rinses, washes, whiskers, distressed, slim, selvedge, baggy,
relaxed, straight and skinny. Whether functional or fashionable the seamless
design of the jean has evolved. Not surprisingly Levi Strauss & Co.'s original
and the first jean, the 501’s denim jeans are stills a staple in the industry.
Furthermore, they have plenty of competitors with a market that is flooded with
every designer’s own brand of denim jeans from the bargain bin to haute couture.
Out of that flood I have found a few favorites, one in particular is the denim
brand Prps.
Prps
was founded in 2002, in New York by Donwan Harrell, a former Nike designers and
founder of the urban clothing line Akademiks. The jeans are
manufactured in Japan. The denim is woven from African cotton on vintage 1960’s
Levi’s looms. Since its inception in 2002, Prps have been a staple among the jean
snobs who love luxury jeans from the fashionable elitist to athletes, actors
and actresses. The first pair of Prps jeans I
ever bought was quite comfortable, stylish, and soft but had an expensive price
tag. However, once again, I got it for cheap because I happen to be working for
the urban clothing store, Up Against the Wall and their employee discount for a
manager at the time was gracious. The starting price for a pair of Prps can be $180 and up
but their jeans cost typically average around $400.
Honestly, I like jeans that are strong in material, look fresh, fit well, have crazy rinses and have a nice cut. I kept my pair for a good six years
until I gave them to my little cousin and he still wears them. Prps’s denim; have nice cuts, fresh rinses and
the denim is amazingly soft, must be that African cotton or something. Furthermore, I love
Prps website, www.prpsgoods.com, their interface is rather dope. I feel like unwrapping personal messages
to me that say, "Bruised, never broken…our jeans evolve with you". Believe it or not they almost feel like they do.
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