Originally Posted by
Chik
Cashmere is no longer a better material. If you can walk into a shop like Uniqlo and get a cashmere sweater for under $100, albeit an absolute crap, it no longer belongs in your exclusion provision.
If we are talking about garments in general, there are some qualifications to be made. Yes, there has been an explosion of upmarket designer apparel whose distribution and marketing budget, which largely didn't exist in 1959, inflate the final selling price. On the other hand, there is "fast fashion" that didn't exist back in 1959 -- H&M, Inditex, Shein, etc -- and has essentially made the dry cleaning industry redundant because it's cheaper to buy new crap than have them cleaned.
However, is the cost performance -- the quality you get for your dollar -- better or worse today than in 1959? I don't know for sure, but I suspect it's not better.
At the other end of menswear, the prices on Savile Row/Naples/Rome for bespoke garments are high, but I really don't think they kept pace with inflation so I think they are cheaper today in real terms than it was in 1959. It doesn't mean the standards have been upheld. The oldest surviving firm on the Row casually admitting that they do the padding by machine and claiming they can do a better job at controlling the tension of the stitching is complete and utter nonsense; it's nothing more than a labour saving tactic.
The cloths that are available today, even from the famed cloth merchants and mills, are not what they used to be. You will not be able to find a barathea today that is of equal quality to the one used on my hand-me-down dinner jacket. They CAN still weave to the standards of yesteryear, but they don't, partly for cost reasons, but again, my point about prices in real terms applies here. Therefore, they have to be coaxed into doing a limited run for private commissions to do it.
We can talk about leather, shoes and other leathergoods, jewellery, etc. They are admittedly categories that were not consumed by the general public whereas today they are. Nonetheless, the point remains, not all things improved. In some cases, it was partly because labour practices were improved, health & safety standards were raised by eliminating the use of chemicals that were harmful to the workers and the environment, and other similar reasons. However, they don't make the product better in quality, just more responsibly made.
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