| No more than $60. I’ve had jeans in the $200 range and they don’t look any different or better than the cheaper ones. If you have a nice ass it’ll look good in anything. If you need help in that area no pair of jeans is going to help you, no matter what you tell yourself. |
| $100-$150. But have only bought two pairs the last 3-5 years and they've lasted. |
| $100. I wear them to work, including to some pretty high-level meetings where I will wear jeans, a nice jacket/shirt/top, and dressy shoes. |
These are all fast fashion outlets. I pay a couple hundred bucks for jeans made here in the US, not in sweatshops in SE Asia. So don't pretend you have the moral high ground. |
| The truth: around $300 |
Not asking snarkily - what jeans do you wear? |
| $40ish. Loft jeans on sale. |
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Between 200-300.
300 is my mental limit, I feel bad going over that. |
| I try to pay less than $100. For the last few years, I've worn Joe's. I try to buy them on sale directly or from Off 5th/Last Call/etc. I have a couple pair of Levi's and jeans from the Gap that I aim for less than $50. |
Well, shoot. I? don’t even have a job and my limit for jeans is $250. |
No one is impressed by this. |
Like where? |
| You get what you pay for. Cheap jeans wash poorly, stretch out, get baggy in the knees. |
Mine is $180 I think. I have 2 pairs I actually wear right now and both are from Target! Ha. But I hate trying on jeans and almost never feel great in them, so if I found some I loved and felt good in I would easily plunk down $300-350 for 2 pair and wear the crap out of them. Price per wear is important- those Target jeans I should be getting paid to wear now! |
If you are going to use it over and over again, it isETC which is short for et cetera. It means "and the rest" in Latin. And if you are going to use it in the future (with the correct spelling, I hope), you only need to use it once in a sentence. When etc. is used in formal writing, it generally means there are other examples out there, but you are too lazy to find or list them. |