Is 0 an acceptable answer?
Because leather jackets are cool and I feel cool wearing them even if I am rather warm sometimes.I’ll be honest, I’ve been chuckling reading about everyone in this thread living in some of the warmest places on Earth. Why would you need even one leather jacket?!
these days my outing is only grocery shopping. I sometime purposefully buy less quantity just to create reason to do it more often.I would say yes, as long as you enjoy having/owning the jacket.
That being said @Turnip just said, you can always create some opportunities. Doesn't matter what they are. Whenever you go out - maybe less so in current times - be it for the post office, groceries, anything really, you can wear most of your jackets and definitely the m/c ones. Important thing is that you like the jacket you wear.
Interesting what others had to say, I am a bit in between.
Obvious example: jeans. Most of the high end men's denim comes in those super-tapered(yoga pants like) cuts. Common! Looks so unbalanced, unless you have very skinny legs. It's getting harder to find a true straight leg jean(not tapered that is called straight). Also the trend of shirts/sweaters that have an ever increasing percentage of synthetics in the composition. And other countless examples.
I am sure some others on here would back me up when I say this, you should check out Wrangler Cowbow Cut jeans. They take some breaking if (if you get the Rigid/raw models) but for around USD $35- 45 these are very hard to beat: https://www.wrangler.com/shop/wrang...fit-jean-13MWZ.html?dwvar_13MWZ_color=13MWZPW
Where do you buy them from if you don’t mind me asking? Cheers mate.Yep, I get them for around $20 each and buy 5 pairs and have them shipped here. Still often cheaper than buying one pair here if you can even find them. My only issue is the blue color is not dark enough and tends to go a lurid blueberry if you use a detergent with optical brighteners.
Where do you buy them from if you don’t mind me asking? Cheers mate.
This flushes out a conflict, or say dissonance, for some collector types who are also minimalists at their core. Things are cool, and they can have a magnetism about them. Those things are fun to study and/or collect. But then some of us suffer this irritation, or at least annoyance, that they clutter up our space. We know things don't have to be used to be appreciated or valued, but that clutter isn't just physical. It affects our mental space in a nagging, negative way. Acquire. Purge. Acquire. Purge. It's a real tug of war with different areas of our brain.I couldn’t have a collection. With such limited wear time having jackets sit in the closet makes me feel worse not better. 6 is a good number To cover temps and occasions.
This flushes out a conflict, or say dissonance, for some collector types who are also minimalists at their core. Things are cool, and they can have a magnetism about them. Those things are fun to study and/or collect. But then some of us suffer this irritation, or at least annoyance, that they clutter up our space. We know things don't have to be used to be appreciated or valued, but that clutter isn't just physical. It affects our mental space in a nagging, negative way. Acquire. Purge. Acquire. Purge. It's a real tug of war with different areas of our brain.
I should have two jackets. One for cold. One for rain. I prefer to layer anyway. We have all four seasons, and I could make two jackets work for all of them.
That's certainty true for me. Some jacket collectors hoard all kinds of stuff; they are maximalists. I try to keep my personal possessions spare and lean. I have a strong dislike of excess and clutter. I would love to get down to 4 or 5 jackets only but I'm weak.
When you let a jacket go, you forget about it inside 3 days. If you let it go, you probably didn't really like it or need it, because it wasn't wanted or a necessity deep down.
I'm like that with books, too. I took a contract once where I only brought my 'core' of books with me and had this little square-shaped shelf arrangement where I put them. I've gotten value out of my two-Aeros-per-two-year-Asian-contract for a long time, now. That and a few books that I re-read and the essential albums that go everywhere with me. Less isn't more, but it is better.
I am sure some others on here would back me up when I say this, you should check out Wrangler Cowbow Cut jeans. They take some breaking if (if you get the Rigid/raw models) but for around USD $35- 45 these are very hard to beat: https://www.wrangler.com/shop/wrang...fit-jean-13MWZ.html?dwvar_13MWZ_color=13MWZPW
Yep, I get them for around $20 each and buy 5 pairs and have them shipped here. Still often cheaper than buying one pair here if you can even find them. My only issue is the blue color is not dark enough and tends to go a lurid blueberry if you use a detergent with optical brighteners.
Thanks for the recommendation. I've been using them since some time. I like them, they are special, rugged, look so American. Different than what you see here in Europe.
I work seated and the high waist is restrictive and makes them a bit uncomfortable. The same goes for the 501 STF that I love. However I needed to switch to mid-rise jeans: Levi 505, Uniqlo (the old straight regular fit selvedge 100% cotton denim).
Speaking about Uniqlo, I discovered these jeans few years ago. I heard about Uniqlo from the online forums. Visiting London I entered by chance in their store. I was surprised to find their rigid selvedge straight(100% cotton), slightly slim(not tapered) it was very nice fitting, the denim looked nice had that irregular pattern. All this for only 39 euros. This was not the early "made in Japan" version, which was even better. Fast forward, 2 years ago I wanted to buy again the same jean(as did in London) passing by one of their stores. I was surprised to find out that the single selvedge was slim-tapered that had elastane(not 100% denim which means they'll look awful with wear) and the fit was ridiculous: I tried on the same size - W32 - and they were fitting me like a girl's leggings and half of my "seat" was out. The material felt flimsy. I then tried the so called "regular" same size W32. It was 1-2 sizes larger around the waist/seat and the legs bottom was tapered. Some kind of 80s jeans but more tapered. Fabric not selvege and ordinary quality like whatever mall jean.
Frankly I can barely find anything good fitting/high quality from their range. The materials have cheapened(thinner, lighter, more faded) and the patterns/cuts are so unflattering: tight on the chest/shoulders and so loose around waist. Who wears this, besides teenagers?
This is what I meant with quality goes down in my initial post, it's a systemic thing, not just one/few makers do it.