Showing posts with label Boyfriend Jeans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boyfriend Jeans. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Rihanna is a restless sleeper, is partial to rotary phones, and packs lightly in a video for Emporio Armani Underwear and Armani Jeans.


Rihanna
is a restless sleeper, is partial to rotary phones, and packs lightly in a video for Emporio Armani Underwear and Armani Jeans. In the black-and-white video, there’s a rotary phone off the hook and Rihanna is tossing and turning in bed. She hangs up the phone, continues to toss and turn, looks at a Polaroid of a bathroom sink and mirror, turns up the steam and finds a note on the mirror: airport 6:00. Rihanna puts on a pair of jeans, a jacket, but no shirt, and leaves for the airport. Or does she? The video ends and she’s still in bed.



directed by Jordan Scott of RSA and edited by Cut + Run’s Dayn Williams.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Gap jeans step into designer territory

By Andrea Chang
LATimes.com Business


The 1969 Premium Jeans line replaces old basics in a bid to win back customers it's lost to stylish competitors. But, skeptics say, can $60 denim really be 'premium'?
Patrick Robinson has led the shake-up of Gap's denim line. The chain is counting on 1969 Premium Jeans to pull it out of a prolonged slump. (Ken Hively / Los Angeles Times / August 6, 2009)

During a visit to a Gap store two years ago, Patrick Robinson didn't need to try on a pair to know that the chain's jeans were the wrong fit.

"I felt there was a problem, and the problem was the jeans hadn't been moved forward with the brand," he said. "The jeans were an old story."

It wasn't idle criticism. Robinson had just been brought in as Gap's executive vice president of design to shake things up amid growing concern that the brand was losing its appeal.

Over the next year and a half, he led an overhaul of the chain's denim, the biggest reworking of jeans in the company's history. Out went Gap's years-old collection of basic straight-leg and boot-cut jeans; in came a line of premium denim featuring "heavy-gauge thread and single-needle stitching," "vintage-inspired busted side seams" and styles such as the Always Skinny and the Sexy Boot.

The new denim line, called 1969 Premium Jeans in homage to the year the San Francisco company was founded, is set to officially debut today, although the jeans have been slowly rolling out in stores during recent weeks.

To Read The Entire Story:
LATimes.com Business and Future Readers Check Out: The Gap

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