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  2. What Is Selvedge Denim and Why Is It So Hot Right Now? - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/selvedge-denim-why-hot-now...

    Selvedge denim is easily identified by the telltale contrast stitching (usually red or white) along jeans’ outer seams—the contrast stitch marks the edge of the loomed width of fabric itself ...

  3. The 9 Best Jeans for Tall Women, Vetted by a 6-Foot-Tall Editor

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/9-best-jeans-tall-women...

    Rag & Bone is another designer denim brand that makes incredible jeans for tall women. Though you can't go wrong with any of its classic silhouettes and washes, I'm partial to this gorgeous, two ...

  4. Denim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denim

    Denim under a microscope. Selvedge identifier visible in white at the interior of a pair of jeans. Most denim made today is made on a shuttleless loom [20] that produces bolts of fabric 60 inches (1,500 mm) or wider, but some denim is still woven on the traditional shuttle loom, which typically

  5. Prps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PRPS

    Prps jeans are manufactured in Japan. The denim used for the manufacture of the jeans is Japanese and Zimbabwean cotton. [2] The Japanese manufacturer of the jeans uses looms from the 1960s similar to the type that were used to produce denim for Levi's. PRPS goods were originally all made in Japan.

  6. These 'forgiving' Gloria Vanderbilt jeans are favorites of ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/these-forgiving-gloria...

    Good jeans can cost upward of $100; these are practically one-sixth of that! You can save nearly 65% during this sale, but word is spreading fast, so don't expect sizes to stick around.

  7. Vidalia Mills - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vidalia_Mills

    Vidalia Mills in Vidalia, Louisiana is a “farm-to-yarn” denim mill. Vidalia's Draper looms were acquired from the now-closed White Oak Mill in Greensboro, North Carolina. It takes about two hours for Draper loom machines to weave enough fabric for one pair of jeans. [1] Vidalia Mills took over the old Fruit of the Loom Mill.