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  2. Three stripes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_stripes

    Finnish Sport Museum has a pair of footwear from the 1940s with the three stripes by Finnish athletic footwear brand Karhu Sports. [3] According to another source, the three stripes mark was created by the Adidas company founder, Adolf Dassler, and first used on footwear in 1949, when Adidas was founded. [1]

  3. Adidas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adidas

    The three stripes are Adidas's identity mark, having been used on the company's clothing and shoe designs as a marketing aid. The branding, which Adidas bought in 1952 from Finnish sports company Karhu Sports for the equivalent of €1,600 and two bottles of whiskey, [ 8 ] [ 9 ] became so successful that Dassler described Adidas as "The three ...

  4. Open-crotch pants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-crotch_pants

    Open-crotch pants (simplified Chinese: 开 裆 裤; traditional Chinese: 開襠褲; pinyin: kāidāngkù), also known as open-crotch trousers or split pants, are worn by toddlers throughout mainland China. [1] Often made of thick fabric, they are designed with either an unsewn seam over the buttocks and crotch or a hole over the central buttocks.

  5. Slim-fit pants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slim-fit_pants

    Slim-fit pants or skinny jeans ... fit through the legs and end in a small leg opening that can be anywhere from 9" to 20" in circumference, depending on size. [1] ...

  6. 1980s in fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1980s_in_fashion

    [14] [15] Women's pants of the 1980s were, in general, worn with long inseams, and by 1982 the flared jeans of the 70s had gone out of fashion in favor of straight leg trousers. Continuing a trend begun during the late 1970s, cropped pants and revivals of 1950s and early '60s styles like pedal-pushers and Capri pants were popular.

  7. Lampasse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lampasse

    Lampasse(s) (German: Lampasse(n)) are trouser stripes adorning the dress uniforms of many armed forces, police, fire and other public uniformed services. In German-speaking countries the uniforms of general staff–qualified officers featured distinctive double-wide lampasses. [1] For a comparable feature of civilian dress, see galloon.

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