| I love pajamas and those are cute, but I cannot pull the trigger on $100 pjs. |
| I thought this was a joke. These Lake pajamas look like toddler pajamas, hideous. I'll stick to boxers and a tee. |
Because boxers and a tee are not hideous? |
| Do woman really wear these? They look like they are made for 4 year olds. |
How else will you quarantine signal that you are in the know and have excess disposable income? |
I agree that the fabric is great, but man, those are some of the ugliest pajamas I’ve ever seen! Though if you close your eyes they feel great! Still, I don’t get why they couldn’t have some solid colors or at least less “granny” looking patterns... |
There are plenty of more expensive pajamas out there. I’m sure this wasn’t OP’s purpose. |
Wait, why would you have to wear a bralette "at least" under these? |
No idea. I don’t and wouldn’t. If I’m a guest at a friend’s house or extended family and feel I need extra modesty, I wear a robe. |
| I have not heard of these. Is this a facebook/instagram thing? If $100 pajamas are your price point, I'd go for Hanro personally. More stylish, and a known luxury brand. I think Natori is nice (and cheaper), I also really like the 100% cotton pajamas on Garnethill.com (they are cheaper too). |
Yes, what is it about these that they can't go in the dryer??? |
|
Of course DCUM turned this into something about money 🙄
If OP likes them go for it |
Not PP, but I don’t like walking around without a bra on. I like pjs that have a shelf bra (I’m 32dd, though, so need the extra support). |
|
They kind of look like kids pajamas from the 80s and kinda like Lands End pajamas.
Oh well, another company that excludes fat people. Bye. |
I have the Garnet Hill PJs and I don't really like them. The cotton isn't actually that soft and they are wildly unflattering -- the waist is boxy and the butt is baggy. My softest nightwear is actually a cotton short nightgown from Target with a shelf bra built in that I love. Also some silk PJs from Company Store (although those also have a weird cut to them, although I like my other Company Store PJs.) PJs are my vice, so I might think about paying $100 for really great PJS...but I'd be more willing to do so if they were at least American-made, and Lake does not appear to be made in America (or anyplace else with decent labor standards like the EU or Canada, or they'd advertise that on their website). I'm not going to pay $100 for cotton t-shirt material sewn by some kid in a Bangladeshi sweatshop. I'd pay it for some worker making over minimum wage, with OT, OSHA protections, and a pension, though. |