Teeextra - Official Female Rage 24 Mad As hell Ready To Make America Better Shirt
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Understanding scale also explains why a higher price doesn't always equate to better fabrics and fair labor. A polyester dress might retail for $400 because the label produced it in small quantities and paid its workers—but it's still polyester, and you shouldn't waste $400 on something so environmentally damaging. Or maybe the brand made it in huge quantities and used cheap labor, but hiked the price to convince you it's an elevated product. There's always going to be confusion when it comes to price, and some brands are always going to value "brand equity" over their workforces. The only way you'll really know if a price is worth your hard-earned cash is by digging deeper and demanding transparency from the brands you support.
From new takes on the traditional white sneaker to different style denim, I'm always looking for ways to elevate my wardrobe basics! Once I caught a glimpse of this classic summer tank with padding in the shoulders, I knew I found this year's summer staple. Naturally, I purchased the tank in mole, white, and black, and have since mixed and matched each colorway into what seems like 50 different outfits. Who said basics could be boring. Like any self-respecting Rick Owens obsessive, I had to get his latest shoe, a version of the Converse All-Star with a Brutalist Owens twist. I still haven't figured out how to style them, I'm thinking with pooling black trousers although Fecal Matter does make the case they look best with a leather bodysuit.
Those customers also understand the importance of supporting modest businesses instead of massive corporations—and that "shopping small" comes at a higher cost. Scale is the other elephant in the room: Typically, the more units of a garment you produce, the lower the price per unit gets. That isn't an explanation for dirt-cheap clothes because labor should be a steady cost, but sewers may be able to work a bit faster as a result of repetition. The price of fabric changes at scale too. If Stanley, Roche, and Romy could triple the size of their businesses, perhaps their prices would come down a little, but that isn't their goal. The larger a company gets, the more difficult it becomes to keep track of the supply chain; we all remember how certain well-known brands didn't even know their clothes were being produced in the collapsed Rana Plaza factory.
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