Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If having these jeans are important to your child, their purchase is something you can afford (as a middle class family can buy $100 jeans), and reflect your family values.... get them.
I do not find them attractive nor could afford them. But I am over 40 middle class government worker and the former peace corps type. I understand that other people have different needs and priorities. As well as ability to fulfill them.
You are missing a "0"
1000, not 100.
As in 1 grand
No. Middle class can buy hundred dollar jeans without killing budget. Wealthy family can buy thousand dollar jeans for a smaller portion of family's budget. I am middle class and non materialistic so hundred dollar jeans would be what I'd buy for my kid without much question
This is not about CAN, but about SHOULD. Our HHI is over $1M and I still buy my jeans from Nordstrom Rack or the sale section of Anthropologie. I have never spent more than $100 on a pair of jeans because I can't justify the expense. I think being somewhat frugal is a virtue.
Anonymous wrote:I'd give him a budget (personally I wouldn't go over $200 for a pair of jeans). If he wants to spend more than that then he can save up for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If having these jeans are important to your child, their purchase is something you can afford (as a middle class family can buy $100 jeans), and reflect your family values.... get them.
I do not find them attractive nor could afford them. But I am over 40 middle class government worker and the former peace corps type. I understand that other people have different needs and priorities. As well as ability to fulfill them.
You are missing a "0"
1000, not 100.
As in 1 grand
No. Middle class can buy hundred dollar jeans without killing budget. Wealthy family can buy thousand dollar jeans for a smaller portion of family's budget. I am middle class and non materialistic so hundred dollar jeans would be what I'd buy for my kid without much question
This is not about CAN, but about SHOULD. Our HHI is over $1M and I still buy my jeans from Nordstrom Rack or the sale section of Anthropologie. I have never spent more than $100 on a pair of jeans because I can't justify the expense. I think being somewhat frugal is a virtue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If having these jeans are important to your child, their purchase is something you can afford (as a middle class family can buy $100 jeans), and reflect your family values.... get them.
I do not find them attractive nor could afford them. But I am over 40 middle class government worker and the former peace corps type. I understand that other people have different needs and priorities. As well as ability to fulfill them.
You are missing a "0"
1000, not 100.
As in 1 grand
No. Middle class can buy hundred dollar jeans without killing budget. Wealthy family can buy thousand dollar jeans for a smaller portion of family's budget. I am middle class and non materialistic so hundred dollar jeans would be what I'd buy for my kid without much question
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://mikeamiri.com/products/shotgun-tee-grey-1
Honestly, this must be a joke. "Individually shotgunned in the California desert."
Cannot....stop.....laughing......
Frankly. I am trying to visualize how this occurs. Someone with a gun on a hot day shoots BBs at t shirts and jeans? One at a time?
To be truly a hand-crafted, artisinal, bullet hole-riddled t-shirt, then yes.
As I parent. I'd buy my kid $1,000 of white high quality t shirts and a BB gun, then have him create a cottage business around urban fashion to buy his own jeans
I'd even let him charge me to "help" shoot after a long hat day at work.
you could give jobs to the thugs in southeast....'individually shotgunned in the mean streets EOTP'
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If having these jeans are important to your child, their purchase is something you can afford (as a middle class family can buy $100 jeans), and reflect your family values.... get them.
I do not find them attractive nor could afford them. But I am over 40 middle class government worker and the former peace corps type. I understand that other people have different needs and priorities. As well as ability to fulfill them.
You are missing a "0"
1000, not 100.
As in 1 grand
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://mikeamiri.com/products/shotgun-tee-grey-1
Honestly, this must be a joke. "Individually shotgunned in the California desert."
Cannot....stop.....laughing......
Frankly. I am trying to visualize how this occurs. Someone with a gun on a hot day shoots BBs at t shirts and jeans? One at a time?
To be truly a hand-crafted, artisinal, bullet hole-riddled t-shirt, then yes.
As I parent. I'd buy my kid $1,000 of white high quality t shirts and a BB gun, then have him create a cottage business around urban fashion to buy his own jeans
I'd even let him charge me to "help" shoot after a long hat day at work.
Anonymous wrote:If we had the kind of money that $1000 was a drop in the bucket, and my ds asked me to spend $1000 on a pair of jeans for him, I would reevaluate everything about my life and the example I have set for him.
Anonymous wrote:If having these jeans are important to your child, their purchase is something you can afford (as a middle class family can buy $100 jeans), and reflect your family values.... get them.
I do not find them attractive nor could afford them. But I am over 40 middle class government worker and the former peace corps type. I understand that other people have different needs and priorities. As well as ability to fulfill them.