Women who hate skinny jeans can rejoice this spring when the extra-tight denim that has dominated the market for more than two years makes way for wide-leg cuts.
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Skinny jeans going out of style?
IN skinny jeans, a deep maroon kurta and oversized sunglasses, Mavin Khoo looks nothing like the world-renowned bharatanatyam dancer he is. Flip flops and a silver earring in his left ear complete the startling picture.
Continue here: Showbiz: Dance is my mistress
NEW YORK (AP) – Walmart Stores is putting electronic identification tags on men’s clothing like jeans starting Aug. 1 as the world’s largest retailer tries to gain more control of its inventory. But the move is raising eyebrows among privacy experts.
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Walmart Plan to Use Smart Tags Raises Privacy Concerns
Boomers boost demand for hip denim with a bit more give.
Continue here: A generation in blue jeans
Suzanne Krauss, of Westport, demonstrates how to use Zip’em!, a device she invented to help wearers of low-rise jeans keep their zippers from unzipping themselves.
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Zip’Em! invention addresses fashion mishap
He wore bibbed overalls at times. He wore jeans with suspenders at times. For dress-up he had slacks with a tucked-in shirt of flannel when the weather was cold or broadcloth when it was warm. He always wore a belt at the waist line.
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When he was home, Dad was our Man of the House
Mom had big hair, Dad wore Jordache jeans, and Madonna was as hot as Ms. Pac Man. Those ’80s were gnarly bad to the max, fer shur, and apparently Hollywood is stoked to bring back the tubular times in the name of family entertainment.
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Leave He-Man and Smurfs in the past
TUCKAHOE There’s a feeling of walking back in time when the doors of Epstein’s open, until you notice that the t-shirts, shoes and jeans are as up-to-date as this month’s fashion magazines.
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Epstein’s: a Tuckahoe tradition since 1933, holds on to its independent status
MEDINA During a warm and bright Sunday at the Medina County Fairgrounds, Melinda Clutter, dressed in a red T-shirt, jeans and rain boots, did not rest during the horse show. Clutter took the reins as the group she and her family formed, the Medina Kids Care for Medina County Home Residents, hosted its ninth … Read More
Continue here: Hoofing it for care facility
World-Herald News Service OMAHA – Working in his Omaha studio, North Platte native Mike Mogis wears a military cap, flannel shirt and jeans. With his beard and horn-rimmed glasses, the clothes make him look like any indie music fans at Omaha music venues like the Slowdown or the Waiting Room.
Continue here: NP native is Nebraska’s music man