shadowrider
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 258
- Location
- Italy
Here where I live, it's almost impossible to find different inseam sizes for jeans. They all seem to be L34 or L36 and, for me, that's awfully long.
If I take them to be altered like any other pants, though, the jeans hem will lose that typical thick, wrinkly aspect which I feel it's part of denim's beauty. Most older people I see have this.
But then once I shopped in a Levi's store, and the clerk told me I could have the in-house tailor shorten the jeans for me while still retaining the original hem. The way he'd do it is cut off the hem, shorten the inseam to size and then re-attach the original hem, trying to hide the new seam. I'm not a fan of this method either, especially if the denim has fading, which will become un-continuous once a piece of fabric is cut off.
I know all this is due to the fact that in-factory hems are "chain-stitched" and most common sewing machines can't do that. So I'm wondering: what do you fellow loungers do? What did they use to do back in the good ol' days?
If I take them to be altered like any other pants, though, the jeans hem will lose that typical thick, wrinkly aspect which I feel it's part of denim's beauty. Most older people I see have this.
But then once I shopped in a Levi's store, and the clerk told me I could have the in-house tailor shorten the jeans for me while still retaining the original hem. The way he'd do it is cut off the hem, shorten the inseam to size and then re-attach the original hem, trying to hide the new seam. I'm not a fan of this method either, especially if the denim has fading, which will become un-continuous once a piece of fabric is cut off.
I know all this is due to the fact that in-factory hems are "chain-stitched" and most common sewing machines can't do that. So I'm wondering: what do you fellow loungers do? What did they use to do back in the good ol' days?