Thursday, December 2, 2010

While shoppers were paying $200 to $300 for Citizens for Humanity and True Religion

To see China's future Co., LTD gap, walk away, enter Rush street of a store a chip is called in 1969.
Cowboy boutique, opened, there's no sign that it is part of the gap. And that is the key to the problem.
Neat stacks of jeans outstretched waist hem from at the same table running the length of the shop. More jeans a painting neatly on the table.

On a rack in large fitting room every example stores of style of jean: 7 the feminine curve, sexy startup, real straight, long and lean, friends, perfect boots and always thin) and seven male (skinny, straight, guide, authentic, standard, easy, feel relaxed, etc.). Some vintage t-shirts and belt decorates wall, but most of the store is denim.
As the premium denim craze swept the country in the last decade, Gap was nowhere to be found. While shoppers were paying $200 to $300 for Citizens for Humanity and True Religion, the ubiquitous mall chain discovered an uncomfortable fact: Shoppers interviewed in focus groups viewed Gap jeans as suitable for mowing the lawn but not for work or a date, Marka Hansen, the president of Gap North America, told the New York Times in an interview last year.

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