Anonymous wrote:LL Bean - New Englandy / preppy
North Face - college kids and annoying fratty adult guys and girls
Eddie Bauer / Columbia- west coast middle aged folk and outdoorsy folk
Patagonia - no comment
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LL Bean is an old brand that appeals to the middle-aged, like me. I love LL Bean. It's not fashionable, but mostly timeless. I have a few fleece jackets from LL Bean that I love. They are warm and well-made and last a long time. Ditto for their polo shirts. I bought several for DH and for the kids, and they last forever. I did buy DD a North Face jacket, which she wore until it practically wore out. She was on the cutting edge of fashion, but stopped wearing it when all her friends started buying North Face jackets (micro-down, or whatever it's called). Now she wears a dumpy, Army-green jacket that's all the rage with her friends. Not my style, but I'm not a teenager.
Oh, sorry, OP. Get the LL Bean jacket if you like it. It's probably better made than the North Face jacket, which is not worth the price at all. And North Face is out, according to DD.
I went to prep school in New England a hundred years ago, which is where I first learned about LL Bean - the kids there used to wear the shoes out, then return them and get a new pair. The flannels were big then, too. I still think of those are clothes that kids too right to care what they look like wear, because of that formative exposure.
Totally right up there with bell bottoms.
Anonymous wrote:
Totally right up there with bell bottoms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LL Bean is an old brand that appeals to the middle-aged, like me. I love LL Bean. It's not fashionable, but mostly timeless. I have a few fleece jackets from LL Bean that I love. They are warm and well-made and last a long time. Ditto for their polo shirts. I bought several for DH and for the kids, and they last forever. I did buy DD a North Face jacket, which she wore until it practically wore out. She was on the cutting edge of fashion, but stopped wearing it when all her friends started buying North Face jackets (micro-down, or whatever it's called). Now she wears a dumpy, Army-green jacket that's all the rage with her friends. Not my style, but I'm not a teenager.
Oh, sorry, OP. Get the LL Bean jacket if you like it. It's probably better made than the North Face jacket, which is not worth the price at all. And North Face is out, according to DD.
I went to prep school in New England a hundred years ago, which is where I first learned about LL Bean - the kids there used to wear the shoes out, then return them and get a new pair. The flannels were big then, too. I still think of those are clothes that kids too right to care what they look like wear, because of that formative exposure.
Anonymous wrote:LL Bean is an old brand that appeals to the middle-aged, like me. I love LL Bean. It's not fashionable, but mostly timeless. I have a few fleece jackets from LL Bean that I love. They are warm and well-made and last a long time. Ditto for their polo shirts. I bought several for DH and for the kids, and they last forever. I did buy DD a North Face jacket, which she wore until it practically wore out. She was on the cutting edge of fashion, but stopped wearing it when all her friends started buying North Face jackets (micro-down, or whatever it's called). Now she wears a dumpy, Army-green jacket that's all the rage with her friends. Not my style, but I'm not a teenager.
Oh, sorry, OP. Get the LL Bean jacket if you like it. It's probably better made than the North Face jacket, which is not worth the price at all. And North Face is out, according to DD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The links show men's jackets. If you're buying for a man, the slimmer fit of the NF probably isn't a big factor.
For a man, definitely get LLBean.
This. Real world fits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The links show men's jackets. If you're buying for a man, the slimmer fit of the NF probably isn't a big factor.
For a man, definitely get LLBean.
Anonymous wrote:The links show men's jackets. If you're buying for a man, the slimmer fit of the NF probably isn't a big factor.