
Prps Jeans are an up-market 'super-denim' denim products that are the culmination of decades of research and design into growing and shipping the cotton; the weaving of the cotton into denim and then the craftsmanship behind turning the raw denim into a wearable product.
The cotton used in creating Prps (pronounced as either 'P-R-P-S' or 'Purpose') clothing is grown especially and organically in Africa. African cotton is chosen as Africa has a climate that is very favourable to the growth of the cotton, and the strength, versatility and endurance which this grants to the grown cotton. Once the cotton is fully grown and harvested, it is sent to the Prps production plants in Japan.
Once the cotton arrives, it is woven into denim. The inconsistencies, little tears and waste are all part of the Prps jeans vision of natural, non-mass production.
With the denim complete, the Prps jeans artists get to work. Although the jeans may follow the same basic patterns and cuts, no two pairs of Prps are identical. Each abrasion, cut, tear, stain, strain, bent button, busted fly, crease, crinkle, rip, dye and wash are created by hand. Unfortunately, Prps has been targeted by counterfeiters. Compared to genuine Prps, these fakes have none of the love or care that every other pair of jean receives in its production. The denim used is the cheapest the criminals can find, the people creating the jeans are usually poorly-paid people that are used to mass-production - quantity over quality. Fortunately for the savvy consumer it is easy to spot and so avoid replication Prps jeans.
This patch is always made from leather and has Prps printed on it in a bold, readable colour. If the patch is not real leather (like if it has a cloth or plastic feel to it) then the item is a fake.
• The Waist-Adjustors Prps will quite usually have waist-adjustors so that the wearer may slightly alter the tension and tightness of the garment. Prps also only use two studs - if the jeans you're looking at have more or less, they're not real. Prps Tag The Prps tag follows a very distinct pattern. First of all, the tag is printed on a dark beige/light brown coloured tag.
Pay close attention to the price - everybody likes a bargain but if the price is too low there is something wrong. If you do fall victim to buying a counterfeit Prps jean, you should waste no time in telling the authorities. Most fake clothing is created and sold by criminals in organised crime; the proceeds from which are often reinvested back into other forms of crime.
Article Source By Dave Kerr: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Dave_Kerr
Summarized by Eri Rm
Hi there,
ReplyDeleteThank you for reposting my article, but could you also please repost my links? It's part of the terms and conditions of republishing the articles and it's incredibly bad form and unethical to use other people's hard work to benefit yourself without giving proper credit in return.
ok i will mr.dave kerr :)
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