GUESS JEANS : Oops! I forgot to answer your question. They ride as low as you want them too. It just depends on where you want them to hit. Girls jeans have a much longer top, all the way ABOVE your belly button, and just are not very comfortable in general.Yep, orange vest and all, got my hard hat on while I type! I didn't knowthat girls jeans had a longer top! Why on earth would designers makesomething that would cover a womans belly button! Make the crop tops nofun at all!In article ,Colleen Adsit wrote: ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ So why, for the love of all things great and small, would u not recommend/wear boys Guess jeans? I just can't stand Levi's 'cuz they're soplayed out.I can see a great marketing opportunity here. Have some eye-catching labelsmade. Sew them on to generic jeans from K-mart. Sell them in exclusivelittle boutiques for $95 a pair. Redesign the label every few months soit doesn't get played out.
GUESS JEANS : That's what you can have done in Korea. When I was in high school in Japan wetook a field trip to Seoul and at the big market (the name escapes me) you couldbuy jeans and have the shop sew on any label you wanted.Christ, they're just jeans, and they all look pretty much the same. Sure why not. As long as the cut is good and the quality is good. Unfortunately, i don't think k-mart is known for their "stylish cuts".I don't understand why there's so much tension over blue jeans. The bottom line is its a question of personal taste. I think it's pretty clear that Levi's are the originals and that's fine. It is also relatively clear that Guess jeans are a higher end more stylish brand made predominantly for women. From what I understand, the levi's are more comfortable than the Guess. GUESS JEANS : Demonstrations, protests and other actions againstsweatshops have built a movement with teeth that has begunto bite--hard.A coalition of labor--including the AFL-CIO, Union ofNeedletrade Industrial and Textile Employees, Farm Workersand others--plus student, community, religious andprogressive groups has even begun to expose big clothingcompanies that try to hide their exploitation of sweatshoplabor by hiring subcontractors and blaming them.This movement, calling itself the Coalition of Conscience,held many activities during the holiday season. Participantsinformed shoppers about which clothing brands are sewn insweatshops--in the United States and in other countries,where U.S.-based companies pay workers even less.The U.S. Labor Department, trying to head off a massmovement that could have real impact, has set up a"Trendsetters" list. This gives the nod to garment-industrymanufacturers and retailers that supposedly ensure theirsubcontractors obey labor laws.Of course, setting up such a list is far easier thanenforcing the laws. GUESS JEANS : There is no real inspection mechanism.Guess? is the biggest clothing manufacturer in SouthernCalifornia and among the biggest in the country.It fired workers trying to organize a union,shut down their Los Angeles-areaplant and moved production to Latin America.already had a long record of outrageous violations ofhealth-and-safety, wage-and-hour, labor and other laws in thiscountry.Conditions for the mostly Latina and Asian womenworkers at Guess? sweatshops are notorious.But during the holiday season, being branded as cruel tothe children who labor in sweatshops and targeted forexploiting low-wage workers in this country, Mexico andSouthern Asia could really hurt sales and profits.First it ran a half-age ad in major newspapers on Dec. 7.In the ad Guess? proclaimed itself "Guaranteed 100% FREE ofSweatshop Labor" and said it supported Labor SecretaryAlexis Herman's "No Sweat Campaign."It even started sewing a "sweatshop-free" label into Guess? jeans.The UNITE union staged protests in New York and Los Angeles,where on Dec. 13 guitarist Tom Morello of the rock group RageAgainst the Machine and 32 others were arrested. GUESS JEANS : Prodded by UNITE, the Labor Department sharply criticizedGuess? for pretending it is on the "Trendsetters" list whenin fact it had been suspended for over a year.Guess? was so taken aback by all this that its marketingexecutives appear to have flipped out. The jeans company rananother big ad, on Dec. 21. This one was a frontal attack onUNITE.The ad is addressed to UNITE President Jay Mazur. Itsbizarre copy seeks to blame the union itself for sweatshops.The ad suggests both that poor conditions still exist insome shops where the workers are in the union--and, at thesame time, that because it has not yet organized all 155,000Southern California garment workers, UNITE is itselfresponsible for sweatshops.As if this would fool someone, the ad is written as thoughby anti-sweatshop crusaders. Its last line, urging people to call UNITE President Mazur, is, "Join thousands of Americans demanding an end to sweatshops."In tiny letters at the bottom right corner is the punchline: "Paid for by GUESS? Inc."
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