Quote:
Originally Posted by PepsiFree
Yeah. While I don’t believe you have to spend money to look good, for the most part of you spend more on a piece of clothing it makes up the value by lasting significantly longer.
Case in point: 5 years ago I paid $130 for a t-shirt. Yes, a t-shirt. I recommend nobody spend that amount, but I just wanted it. However, that same t-shirt still looks brand new, and significantly better than the t-shirts I’ve bought since then (even in the last year) from the likes of Costco, the Gap, etc. It’s gone through the same washes, been washed the same amount (a lot more, since it’s been around 5 years, but it goes in with all the other t-shirts) and it’s still here and looking as good as new while other newer shirts look like garbage or have already hit the donation bin.
Same with Vans. All the pairs I’ve had look beat to #### after a year (I still wear them because I feel like Vans are supposed to look haggard and it’s pretty much unavoidable if you skate them), but the nicer shoes I have still look fantastic after 3+ years.
I would never buy $600 shoes. But if I did, I have a lot of confidence they’ll give me 6x the life of Vans (or more).
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I have 2 levels of dress shirt.
The dress shirt I only wear with suits which run around $150-$200 each, but last forever if you buy style/colour which is timeless or close to. This is why undershirts are key as well. The Dress shirt doesn't soak up the sweat or grease the undershirt does. The dress short always looks fresh and clean and new.
The dress shirts I wear daily are in the $50-100 range. It allows for buying shirts that have a short style life, and are generally less quality. But again is you wear and undershirt the life of them is extended.
Also, just so you know, no dress shirt is "No Iron". All dress shirts should be ironed before wearing with the exception of flannel, but they ain't "dress".