I had no idea... I love my Carhartt stuff, but might pass on the hat. It looks like Carhartt is capitalizing on this, good for them.
I had no idea... I love my Carhartt stuff, but might pass on the hat. It looks like Carhartt is capitalizing on this, good for them.
#RESIST
Yawn
(but I will admit to having an attachment to my Santa Fe jacket)
There's nothing civil about this war.
Looked at a Carhartt hat once in a Tractor Supply. It was synthetic and I wanted merino wool so I passed. I really wasn't looking for fashion nor did I know it was fashionable.
I like my double knee pants, the rest of the stuff I can pass on.
I was buying their stuff for years, but not as much anymore - quality took a real dive starting around ten years ago.
Ken
BBI: ...”you better not forget the safe word because shit's about to get weird”...
revchuck38: ...”mo' ammo is mo' betta' unless you're swimming or on fire.”
I grew up in a place where a solid carhartt coat was damn near required. Upstate New York is balls cold, and has widespread economic hardships... in laymens terms it's a poorer area.
A carhartt was important. You needed a coat that was warm, but wouldn't get ruined doing firewood. Mine is a green collared coat, handed down from Mom when she got a new one. It's just rugged as hell clothing. I didn't even know it was popular with urbanites.