American Giant: San Francisco-based American Giant
claims to make The Perfect Hoodie. I
bought one. It is. They also make the same sweatshirt as a crew
neck.
Olivers
Apparel: Los Angeles-based Olivers makes shorts, shirts, and
sweat clothes for runners and gym-goers. Their slim-fit sweaters also would work
well as streetwear.
DSTLD:
Los Angeles-based DSTLD is an online-only, direct-to-consumer clothing
designer and seller. Their wares include slim-cut, linen-yard sweaters.
Patagonia: With Ventura-based Patagonia, you
get what you pay for. What you pay is a
lot. What you get is exactly what you
want. Patagonia’s gear and clothing
looks great, it works perfectly, and it is manufactured as ethically and
sustainably as reasonably possible. I do not yet own a Patagonia
sweater. But I do own a broad
cross-section Patagonia clothing and gear, all of which may very well last me
forever.
Chrome: When I lived in the real Bay Area (i.e., the Bay Area in which you can see the Bay Bridge and the Golden Gate Bridge with minimal effort), Chrome was the most ubiquitous brand of messenger bags and backpacks. Now, they've expanded their line to include everything that a bike-messenger-type urbanite needs for day-to-day living, including sweaters.
Mountain Hardwear: Richmond-based Mountain Hardware
has been my go-to supplier for camping-and-backpacking clothing and gear for
more than a decade. Their line includes
sweaters, which probably are of high quality, and which look nice, in an
a-backpacking-company-made-this sort of way.
Volcom: Orange County-based Volcom is a one-stop shop for skater/surfer/snowboarder fashion, from sweaters to board shorts to two-piece suits. Because they target skaters – who shred clothes quickly, no matter how high quality – I did not expect Volcom to put much effort into the second-thing-to-go elements of clothing construction. After all, why double-stitch a garment that’s going to be rags within weeks regardless? But I was pleasantly surprised. A few years back, I bought a Volcom button-up. It was a good purchase. The shirt had a clean silhouette, but with slightly skewed seams that bent people’s eyes just enough to prevent them from looking past me. And – because I do not lead a tear-through-fabric lifestyle – it lasted for years.
AG Jeans: Los Angeles-based AG made its name designing flattering and socially conscious jeans, which my wife has worn happily for years. They also make sweaters.
American Apparel: So here's the thing about Los Angeles-based AA: It's well made, and it looks great on the people who it looks great on. For everyone else, AA seems designed specifically to highlight the ways in which it does not look great on them. Don't know which category you fall into? Well, the folks around you do. Ask someone you trust if you're one of the people who AA designs its clothes to fit. If the answer is yes, then lucky you -- you have a one-stop shop for relatively inexpensive, ethically manufactured, long-lasting basics. If the answer is no, walk away from this brand forever.
Volcom: Orange County-based Volcom is a one-stop shop for skater/surfer/snowboarder fashion, from sweaters to board shorts to two-piece suits. Because they target skaters – who shred clothes quickly, no matter how high quality – I did not expect Volcom to put much effort into the second-thing-to-go elements of clothing construction. After all, why double-stitch a garment that’s going to be rags within weeks regardless? But I was pleasantly surprised. A few years back, I bought a Volcom button-up. It was a good purchase. The shirt had a clean silhouette, but with slightly skewed seams that bent people’s eyes just enough to prevent them from looking past me. And – because I do not lead a tear-through-fabric lifestyle – it lasted for years.
AG Jeans: Los Angeles-based AG made its name designing flattering and socially conscious jeans, which my wife has worn happily for years. They also make sweaters.
American Apparel: So here's the thing about Los Angeles-based AA: It's well made, and it looks great on the people who it looks great on. For everyone else, AA seems designed specifically to highlight the ways in which it does not look great on them. Don't know which category you fall into? Well, the folks around you do. Ask someone you trust if you're one of the people who AA designs its clothes to fit. If the answer is yes, then lucky you -- you have a one-stop shop for relatively inexpensive, ethically manufactured, long-lasting basics. If the answer is no, walk away from this brand forever.
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