Random questions to which you seek an answer
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@Giles said in Random questions to which you seek an answer:
@dirtyframer said in Random questions to which you seek an answer:
personally im a big fan of having a rotation
Me too, of one......

LOL not helpful but it might be The Way after all...
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@goosehd said in Random questions to which you seek an answer:
Rotation…wake up and pick a pair, wear it for a day, maybe a week, maybe a month. Don’t track wears, don’t track washes…enjoy what I have for what it is. Really well made clothing.
This is where my original stream of cognative diarrhea began. I would love to enjoy a fruit salad instead of the same apple every day. Even if it's the best apple in the universe.
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@Oaktavia Really great post for starters. I have 5 pairs of 25OZ jeans and they are my basic rotation from pretty much October to May,and I’ve been doing this for years. They all have between 300- 400 days of wear on them. Now that it’s gotten warmer I wear all my 21OZ jeans which consists of about 7 pairs. I still have my very first pair of Iron Hearts,634s which I still wear on occasion. As well as my first pair of 555 SBGs which I’ve been enjoying this Summer. There you have it.
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@Tago-Mago said in Random questions to which you seek an answer:
@Oaktavia as a variation on @Jett129's post: pick 5 pairs to rotate on weekdays for a year, then you have the weekend for "cheat days"
I think this is the best option or something similar.
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@Oaktavia What I’m trying to say is I don’t get hung up on any single pair. I’m not trying to accomplish anything with my clothing although I do appreciate people who do. It’s not me or the way I operate and choose each days outfit for how I want to look or feel. If it’s hot, no XHS, if it’s cold, no 16oz slubs. I dress to be comfortable and sometimes to look what I perceive is good. Other’s may hate what I wear daily, but then again, I’m not trying to impress them.
Wear what you want, when you want…simple approach that works well for me and possibly others.
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…and to add, I entered in one indigo invitational and made it about 3 months before I realized it wasn’t for me. I hated the thought of having to wear the same jeans day in and day out. It was that revelation that made me realize that the entire charts, wears, washes, etc wasn’t for me.
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@goosehd said in Random questions to which you seek an answer:
…and to add, I entered in one indigo invitational and made it about 3 months before I realized it wasn’t for me. I hated the thought of having to wear the same jeans day in and day out. It was that revelation that made me realize that the entire charts, wears, washes, etc wasn’t for me.
Oh yes, they aren't for me either...
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Only cause you asked…


I have the same type of thoughts going through my head all the time.
I have a pretty large rotation of clothes, and I also have a lot of clothes that never make it into the rotation. Over the last year or two, I’ve been focused on keeping only the pieces I actually wear. If I haven’t worn something in a year, it’s sold or given away.
I know there are exceptions. Some people would never part with a 20th Anniversary piece or another particularly popular or one time releaae, and I totally get that. I just don’t have the same emotional attachment to clothing that I used to.
Footwear was even harder. At least with shirts and denim, you can realistically rotate through everything in a few months, especially if you’re changing two or three times a day like I sometimes do, depending on what’s going on. With 40 or 50 pairs of boots, though, for me that is just not possible, especially since I’m not wearing every pair on construction sites. It’s not even about the price. It’s about using the right tool for the right job.
I’ve made this all about me, but I get where you’re coming from. I go through phases too. I’ve sold about 30 pairs of boots over the last year, and I’ve lost count of how many clothing items, some Iron Heart but mostly other heritage brands, I’ve let go because I simply wasn’t wearing them.
As I’m trying to reduce the overlap, I’m becoming a lot more selective. Sure, I’m always going to have multiple denim shirts, but I probably don’t need two Dobby shirts that are similar in weight or fill the same role. I don’t need any of this, but I’m trying to buy with more intention instead of just accumulating more.
I still want to buy it all and have it all. I’ve just learned that, for me, it didn’t really add anything. It only created anxiety from having so much stuff, whether it was clothing or footwear.
When clothing and boots becomes one of your hobbies, which they have been for me for a number of years, it’s interesting how you have to navigate what you like, what actually makes you happy, and what simply adds to the pile. I still enjoy the hunt and appreciate great pieces, but I’ve found I’m much happier with a more thoughtful collection than one that’s constantly growing.
Edit: As if I haven’t said enough already, I also understand trying to figure out how to rotate everything. When do you wear something? Do you start fading it now, save it for later, or just leave it alone?
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@northsouthdenimguy Thank you for the write up, I value the insight and it actually does help quite a bit. 50 boots is wild! That is amazing you were able to sell 30 of them. I have sold about 30 items total from my collection in the past year and it feels AMAZING!
I wanted to point out the point you made about having too much gear and it causing anxiety. My wife said it's stressing me out that I have too many pants to wear. And it is true. Who knew, when we think we relieve stress by "therapy purchases" and it just compounds it. The entropy of an isolated system always increases over time.
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I've got a generally simple rotation plan. I pick a pair I want to wear and generally commit to only wearing those for at least a month or until they need to be washed. I'll select the pair based on the season, so right now I'm in 16oz slubs. If I'm going to do lots of yardwork or something dirty, I might switch to a beater pair, especially if I just put on a fresh pair. Generally I can't wear pants more than 2mo before I start to feel gross, so that starts the rotation again. This way feels pretty reasonable for how many pairs I have and still feels like I can make progress and actually see a difference.
I definitely have some pair though that I need to sell as I've started to prefer different things though, so that helps keep the number to rotate through a bit smaller.
Edit, I'll also add I dislike rotating pairs regularly during the week because I hate having to swap out my belt, knife, and anything else small in my pockets.
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I’m on the @goosehd side of this discussion. I will never “keep up with the denim Jones’” with fading. plus, I quickly realized that fades show up a ton better in photographs than they do to the naked eye.
Once I realized this hobby wasn’t about chasing the dramatic wow factor fades for me, it became easy to switch out jeans and make outfits out of my small (in comparison to my forum activity may suggest) collection.
Seeing such openness from high standing forum members about collect/hoard vs wear anxiety has me thinking of a few things I could move to fill so called “gaps” in my wardrobe.
Great posts by all on this topic.
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I'm pretty loose with rotation and don't keep track of wear/wash etc. I do always have a pair of jeans I'm actually "working on" though. If I wear IH every day, there's the one I wear every other day, and that other day goes to whatever pair. If I've been wearing work pants (not my IH a lot of the time), everytime I wear my good pants its the pair "I'm working on". I usually change between that target pair when the fades of one get set to how I like or need to repair them. For a top, I've been wearing my 293 a ton over the last year and a half I've owned it, but it is also my only denim top. And the 293 is pretty perfect weight for my coastal climate.
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I’ve never felt that way with my clothes - I’m in the goose camp, and just really enjoy well made clothing. I’m also really happy with clothes that can be repaired, and I’m really glad that I’ve gotten rid of the notion that “presentable” clothes were also clothes showing very little sign of wear. Which was pretty much the way of the eighties and early nineties, when I grew up.
But I can relate to your stress - I have a decent wine collection. And though I’ve pretty much stopped adding to it (apart from one yearly addition of Falkenstein), there was a point when my search for the right bottles at the right price, combined with my focus on cooking food that would pair well with what I had in the cellar, became a straight jacket, rather than a joy.
I still enjoy wine, but I’m telling myself that whenever I take a nice mature bottle out of the cellar I’m enjoying the fruit of my labor - instead of fretting about how to replace it.
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I’m enjoying this discussion and thanks to @Oaktavia for starting it. This is definitely one of those situations where there are no right answers. Unless I’m off work, I only get to wear IH three days a week and so I like to ring the changes. Fades will come with time but I’m happy to take the long view and focus on different combinations.
Sure, I’ll lean more towards and away from different items at different times but there’s also an emotional aspect for me. I tend to lay out what I’m going to wear before going through the bathroom as part of my morning routine and sometimes I just don’t feel a particular outfit even if it’s perfect for my plans, weather, etc. By the time I’ve made a few substitutions I’ll know I’ve landed where I need to be.
I think it’s similar to the way I listen to music. I might have favourite artists and albums (long term or for a season) but I could never just listen to one or two records on my commute. There are also times when an absolute favourite fails to hit the spot and after a few mishits I land on something that’s perfect for a particular moment (maybe something completely unexpected that I’d forgotten about or something new). If I can capture that feeling when I’m getting dressed, there’s at least a chance I’ll have a good day.
Anyway, that might just be me. I love that other people do things differently. If everyone was like me, the world would be a truly terrible place!
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@northsouthdenimguy Great post! Sometimes I find myself in my closet for 15 minutes trying to figure out what too wear
Steve Jobs made it so simple. -
@Oaktavia thanks for reading it… I may have already been into a couple cocktails when I wrote it. lol
I think some of us probably think way too much about this stuff, but I’m good with that. There’s much worse things to spend your time on.
