Picked up Esquire's new Big Black Book of Style this weekend and was perusing it. I noticed in the section on sweaters they had a Nordic-looking chap modelling an Icelandic sweater, with which he was wearing a pair of Dolce & Gabbana fine-wale blue corduroy pants that carried a suggested retail tab of $1,050!
Now, I have in the recent past bought some similar fine-wale cords from L.L. Bean that currently retail for $40. I note that Lands' End offers similar pants for $50 (but, unlike Bean, they offer hemming in quarter-inch increments, which I like). Lands' End also have some super-high-grade corduroys for $175. In the current Carroll & Co. catalog, their best corduroys are $245. (I tend regard Carroll & Co.'s offerings as very high-quality but rather presposterously pricey, for the most part.)
S-o-o-o, what is it about D&G's corduroy pants that make them worth 26X the price of Bean's? I tend to regard corduroy as an inherently cheap fabric, and how much difference can there be in workmanship, etc., between machine-made pants to warrant this enormous price differential? (And I thought the $40 Bean's cord were perfectly decent pants). Or, for that matter, why the D&G's should be more than 4X the cost of Carroll & Co.'s very pricey cords? Is this some sort Cruiser-esque philistinism on my part that renders me incapable of discerning what makes D&G worth so much more, or is this, as I suspect, just an outrageous rip-off based on trading on a designer name?
Last edited by captainpreppy (2008-10-06 13:45:02)
Cap'n,
I think you've pretty well answered your own question at the very end.
People are suckers, although with the stock market down another 350 pts today, I wouldn't be surprised if those cords went on sale real soon. I just purchased a pr of cord jeans from LL Bean for less than $40 and if they ever wear out, Bean would probably replace them. Many years ago, I saw a simple white cotton shirt from Ferre in Barneys for a then-stratospheric $500. Stunned, I asked the salesperson if they were selling many of the shirts and he said they couln't keep them in stock. People are suckers.
I find that low animal cunning helps a lot in business. More so than anything else perhaps.
Luck is important, so is opportunism, and so is an exploitative nature.
What a world!
Last edited by The_Shooman (2008-10-07 03:19:57)
www.corduroyclub.com (There's gotta be one online for booger aficionados)
There are legions of ostentatious boobs over at SF and the GQ forum, er, fora, who can answer that question. It is a badge of honor amongst some of those nincompoops to spend $600 in a T-shirt or $800 on a pair of fucking idiotic looking patent leather high top sneakers..