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  2. Everything at Old Navy is 50% off for Black Friday — and they ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/the-new-old-navy-black...

    Baggy Straight Leg Chino Pants for Boys $13 $25 Save $12 These loose-fitting trousers are great for everyday wear, from school, to recess and. Get them in green and khaki in sizes 5 to 18.

  3. 7 pairs of pants we're adding to our cart during Old Navy's ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/7-pairs-of-pants-were...

    Like Old Navy, who has a full clearance section that is offering an additional 30% off at checkout. Earlier this week, we highlighted some of the cutest sweaters on sale at Old Navy , but the sale ...

  4. Old Navy's (very) early Black Friday deals, right this way

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/old-navy-early-black...

    Baggy Straight Leg Chino Pants for Boys $10 $25 Save $15 These loose-fitting trousers are great for everyday wear, from school, to recess and. Get them in green and khaki in sizes 5 to 18.

  5. OshKosh B'gosh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OshKosh_B'Gosh

    OshKosh B'Gosh was sold to Carter's, another clothing manufacturer, in 2005 for $312 million, [8] though it still operates under the original name. [citation needed] Today the company sells accessories, jeans, pants, shirts, sweaters, t-shirts, tank tops, and its trademark overalls. The company produces clothing for babies, infants, toddlers ...

  6. Toughskins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toughskins

    When launched, the line consisted of children's jeans which were sold with the guarantee that children would grow out of them before the pants wore out. A Sears brand-awareness survey determined that by 1973, the Toughskins had become better known by mothers than the Levis brand, already a century old at that time.

  7. Slim-fit pants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slim-fit_pants

    Pants, which had come to mean tight-fitting trousers, but now just a synonym, fitted more loosely from the 1840s onwards as mass-production replaced tailoring. Beginning in the Edwardian era and continuing into the 1920s, baggy "Oxford" or "collegiate" trousers and plus fours were fashionable among the younger generation.