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Lacoste

Originally posted by sbbbjm@Jun 23rd, 2004 - 11:34 am
whatcha talking bout? i love high waisted elastic waistbands

*snaps elastic on pants waist* i can kick, stretch, and kick! i'm 50!
just reminds me of when I wore Oshkosh jeans as a five year old. I hated elastic waistbands. :rolleyes:
 
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just reminds me of when I wore Oshkosh jeans as a five year old. I hated elastic waistbands. :rolleyes:

Oh gawd. I had the most horrible pair of hand-me-down electric blue corduroy bellbottoms when I was about 9. This would have been 1986, and nobody wore bellbottoms by then. And they always got caught in my bike chain! That was the last pair of elastic waist pants I have ever had, thank goodness.
 
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Oh gawd. I had the most horrible pair of hand-me-down electric blue corduroy bellbottoms when I was about 9. This would have been 1986, and nobody wore bellbottoms by then. And they always got caught in my bike chain! That was the last pair of elastic waist pants I have ever had, thank goodness.
Down with elastic waistbands!! :nuke: :yuk:
 
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I'm 29 now, and I grew up wearing Lacoste shirts. In the early to mid-80's (approx.), through the miracle of licensing (that penomenon that has brought designers such as YSL and tailors such as Gieves & Hawke to their knees), the company "IZOD" began producing all of the "crocodile" shirts for the US.

The Izod products didn't have the quality that the originals had, and towards the end, the designs were really questionable.

I'm glad that Lacoste has made a resurgence. At first, they claimed that the line would only be manufactured in France; however, most of the men's shirts are now being made in Peru, and there is definately a difference in quality. I've noticed that more of the women's items are actually still made in France.

I find a lot of their women's line to be well done and pretty sexy tennis stuff, but the men should probably keep it to the solid color polos. Those zip-up shirts and silky numbers that I see high-school and college guys wearing are IMHO tasteless, and I'm seeing more and more of them.

Although I have quite a few solid Lacostes, I only wear them in navy, white, or sky-blue (I hate to admit it, but I think RL has a better color palate). . . I'm guessing I have but 2 or 3 more months before the mere presence of the croc on my shirt will raise the same eyebrow that the word "Hollister" across my chest might.
 
Au contraire - Parisienne designers have always relied on licensing to break into the American market. Originally, it bypassed the expensive shipping and tariffs on foreign luxury goods...

I didn't know that Lacoste was now made in Peru though :o This reminds me of when Jaeger swapped to manufacturing in Turkey :sick:
 
Oh gawd. I had the most horrible pair of hand-me-down electric blue corduroy bellbottoms when I was about 9. This would have been 1986, and nobody wore bellbottoms by then. And they always got caught in my bike chain! That was the last pair of elastic waist pants I have ever had, thank goodness.
Yikes. I got stuck with the horrible 70s hand-me-downs too as a kid because my mom had no money. Well at least we could say that we were wearing vintage before it was the style. Oh wait- it wasn't considered vintage then... just tacky. :lol:
 
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Originally posted by PrinceOfCats@Jun 28th, 2004 - 1:05 pm
Au contraire - Parisienne designers have always relied on licensing to break into the American market. Originally, it bypassed the expensive shipping and tariffs on foreign luxury goods...

I didn't know that Lacoste was now made in Peru though :o This reminds me of when Jaeger swapped to manufacturing in Turkey :sick:
I guess I can't begrudge them their profits, but I really hate the diminished quality. I have seen Turkey on a few things (and I'm not talking bathrobes and towels) . . . yikes.

I have a navy "made in france" Lacoste polo shirt that has been washed twice as much as its Peruvian closet-mates, and still looks much much deeper and truer.

While licensing may work for some companies that desparately need to get product into the market-stream cheaply, I believe (nay, "hope") that at the end of the day, this will be a losing proposition that does little more than sacrifice a company's future viability for temporary profits. Look at the money that Lacoste and YSL have had to spend to reinvent themselves to once again become relevant. I'm curious to see if anyone will ever resurrect Pierre Cardin. ;)
 
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When i interviewed for Lacoste last year i found out that Devanly is teh company that is manufacturing the Lacoste shirts now and the shirts sold in the U.S. are the same quality as the ones sold in France. At one point the Lacoste items cost more in Europe do to the better quality of fabric used.
 
what i really dont understand is, i heard some lacoste comes from peru while others from from thailand, what are the differences? are some imitations of some sort?
 
mikeijames said:
somebody told me that fred perry is associated with new-nazi

really ??? I never heard of that before.. I thought that it is a British Brand...
 
I love Lacoste black polos, I think the new Lacoste piqué stretch is much better than the original Lacoste polo, they certantly look much better on women body
 
No, Lacoste is French. Lacoste is the name of a former French tennis player (in the 20s or 30s), whose nickname was the crocodile.
 
I think Lacoste is really nice, but it bothers me that it isnt all made in France and some stuff is made in Peru, etc. so I always make it a point to read the tag.
That is not cool, I am not willing to pay $95 for a third rate quality polo...
 
I agree with you regarding the fact it is done in Peru.
Regarding quality, I guess that even in Peru the quality is strictly controlled, because the y can't afford to sell bad quality for that price, but it is a pity European textile factories close one after the other and that all brands relocate to South America or Asia.
 
My mom has several polos of Lacoste and I got one as gift , they all made in France.
 
It would be great if all teh polo shirts were made in France.
But, you know, in the same way for French people, Nike sneakers, Levis jeans, and so on should be made in USA...
 
Fruchtzwerg said:
really ??? I never heard of that before.. I thought that it is a British Brand...

Fred perry is actually revered among skinheads, not neo nazis.
 

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