The small things, the little details...
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Double Gauze is a beautiful weave.

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Several shades of indigo. IHSH- 413, 417, 397

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Red Western IHSH-396 13.5oz

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Perfection.

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Outside of the chainstitched instructions, I love these details on my Big Bro shirt by the amazing Roy.
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Mid drive and noticed how spot on two separate batches of the original 21oz fabric is. 526pj from a couple batches ago vs the last 1955s release.

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Pardon the shit photos but just love the stitch details on IH’s double knee work offerings. Specifically how the inner leg of the double knee shows both layers of the denim w the outer layer double stitched and inner layer triple stitched only cm’s apart

The outer stitch of the leg is not symmetrical in that it is all stitched together to one seam with the triple stitch

I’m not sure if there is a functional reason behind this but again, LOVE the aesthetics and attention to detail here -
This thread is so good. This triggers me to be more detailed oriented
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Threw my clothes on my bed, waiting for the shower, my sister and nieces in town so little bit of a wait. Looked over and thought this was cool pic of the patches, and belt. -
@meatmarketdenim1 super cool! Love the UHR patch.
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@Mizmazzle
Thanks man, I think this pair is from few runs ago. The patch looked like it was treated, but I asked who bought it from and just came that way. Been loving the UHRs, wearing everyday, really starting to pop. I’ll post some pics in evo soon. -

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A thread for easily overlooked coincidences of the universe that caught your interest.
It seems to me that a group of people who obsess over things like the gentle gradations of whiskers and honeycombs in denim could possibly be people who notice interesting (at least to themselves!) quirks of the universe that others might easily overlook.
I am interested in those things that a thousand people would walk by, but which stopped you in your tracks and made you investigate or just pause to appreciate it. Something tiny, perhaps, that moved or intrigued you; or both.
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Case in point. Last night, I was out walking and saw what looked like a dead moth on the ground. But it's February in Minnesota, so there's no moths flying around to drop dead in the first place.

Closer inspection revealed a pebble with shadows cast by two roughly equidistant floodlights.




