Yes, carhartt jeans are still the most durable yet still the hardest to find.
Levi Strauss & Co. is a brand that is known for producing denim work clothing for railroad workers, particularly their iconic Levi's jeans. Other brands that provided work clothing for railroad workers include Carhartt and Dickies. These brands specialize in durable and functional workwear designed for the demands of labor-intensive jobs like those in the railroad industry.
One can find information about whether wearing white jeans after Labor Day is a faux pas in the online version of Lucky magazine. Access Hollywood also has an article on wearing white jeans after Labor Day.
30 percent
30 percent
most labor for a child was outside. and in the olden days there would be kids that were slaves and they did labor.
American Eagle has great jeans at a low cost. They have many sales throughout the year; a Labor Day sale is coming up. Also, you can buy skinny jeans for sale at JCPenney and Macy's, which almost always have sale prices.
Cheap mens jeans are often made with slave labor. Children working in sweatshops for very long hours for no pay often make inexpensive clothing or other products.
Only if it is written in your company's policies or dress code. Also, if you've received a warning for wearing tight jeans before. If there is no suce policy an you've never been reprimanded for wearing tight jeans, and you get fired, you may have a reason to contact the labor board.
Jeans were invented because workers, usually in construction, needed a good pair of pants that will hold up, not tear, and not wear out so often. So, jeans were invented, but mainly for construction and labor and working purposes.
yes that is the main problem now of days
Yes, both in service/labor and parts. When they were durable it was sensible to spend more on first class engineering and construction. Things change.
J. I. Gershuny has written: 'Social innovation and the division of labour' -- subject(s): Division of labor 'After industrial society?' -- subject(s): Consumer Durable goods, Durable goods, Consumer, Self-service (Economics), Service industries