COMPLETE Guide To Uniqlo Straight Leg Pants (Jeans, Easy Ankle, Smart Ankle, Pleated, Chinos)

COMPLETE Guide To Uniqlo Straight Leg Pants (Jeans, Easy Ankle, Smart Ankle, Pleated, Chinos)
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Guide to Uniqlo Straight selvedge JWA jeans, Easy Ankle, Smart Ankle, Wide Pleated Pants, and regular straight chino pants. I do comparison/review of all Uniqlo’s straight leg pants and give you a size fit guide.

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Time Stamps:
0:00 Intro
0:17 Smart Ankle
1:36 Easy Ankle
2:33 Straight Jeans
4:22 Straight Chinos
5:17 Wide Pleated Pants
6:29 Which is best for you?
7:40 Summary (Side by side look)

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About the Author: Men's Fashion Files

9 Comments

  1. This is such a great brand . The prices are so reasonable you would be crazy to not go there when I have a idea on clothing style Igo there first and most times very happy with the purchase . You find Italian French and English style for a quarter of the price

  2. I worked for Uniqlo back when the only US location was in Soho. Hated almost every moment of it but I still shop there religiously. And with time, maturity and a few visits to Japan, I've come to learn Uniqlo really was trying to import their Japanese work culture and customer service standards into the western market. They even had us shouting promotions at customers at the top of our lungs. Thought it was absolutely insane, but in Tokyo its common practice. The quality has dipped over the last 10 years but still higher quality than most fashion retailers within the same price range.

  3. Best thing about Uniqlo is the branding: most items are low-key and without obnoxious branding all over them, making your style show instead of how much you payed for it. Its the only down jacket I could find without that obnoxious North Face, Patagonia, Columbia, etc etc logo.

  4. Here in Asia, Uniqlo represents the upper tier of what the typical working class person can afford. You either buy 10 supermarket shirts that fall apart after a year, or 3-4 Uniqlo shirts that fall apart after 10 years. Over the years, it's cemented itself as a reliable standby for clothing that's not particularly interesting, but is well-made and durable while being priced fairly for their target market. In other words, the people who shop at and wear Uniqlo typically cannot hope to afford the clothing brands featured on this channel. Nobody who shops at Uniqlo for $50 pants is ever going to entertain the idea of buying $500 pants.

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