The Evolution of Iron Heart
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Think I liked the pics too , did when just scrolling through. not take a closer look at that moment.
Everyone can do what ever they want with their clothes , don’t care as long as they not take part in a competition.
And there are lot guys who do such things in competition I guess. -
Totally @Oaktavia little surprised IH actually posted the picture on their Instagram.
After having some of the best faded IH jeans come through their doors for repair and to be featured in the hall of fades that this pair just looks suspicious..Think that’s parts of the problem he actually hasn’t put quality time into them but used some sort of abrasive to enhance the honeycombs then to post it on social media to get over 2k people liking it… so they continue to do so because it’s easy.. Same crap with competitions too many people just liking the post instead of questioning it..
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I find these laser beam sandpaper fade guys extremely obnoxious, but it's not like there's anything to be done about em. They seem obviously phony to me, but the posts always have a shitload of likes. I guess people are just into fades that look like bad 2000s era Diesels ️
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If the fades corresponded in other areas of the jeans, they would look more realistic.
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This just shows how people have no patience and want instant results and likes. Wearing raw denim isn't about how quickly or how perfect the fades are it's what you did in them to produce those fades. Well for me anyway
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This just shows how people have no patience and want instant results and likes. Wearing raw denim isn't about how quickly or how perfect the fades are it's what you did in them to produce those fades. Well for me anyway
Couldn’t agree more anyone who loves this brand know it’s about the journey from the first day you throw that pair on and keeping track of the process along the way to seeing the dedication pay off in months of wear with some amazing fades custom to your way of life something to be proud of . Not cheating the process
Glad the IG post got removed it definitely wasn’t worthy.. -
@Jcaz6996 I am so horribly conflicted on this discussion. Do I like the sanded artificial fade look personally? No, but there is a huge but in all of this.
We are all different and have different tastes and aesthetics. Each person’s jeans and the way they wear them is up to that individual. We’ve seen everything from paint splatters, ocean washed, jeans covered in coffee grounds, sanded, etc…Each are unique and represent the person wearing them. Should we judge if this person decides this is the way they want to wear their jeans? If so, where does it stop.
Once again, I’m not saying any of this is right and wrong. Just my $.02
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Good point @goosehd I also feel less upset about someone doing silly things to customise their jeans. I like my bleached pair of OD21oz, and that is certainly an artificial speeding up of the fading process. Trying to deceive, especially in a contest, seems to be the issue here though, and I'd agree that seems silly. Outside of a contest, and if not pretending otherwise, seems cool that denim is something you can play around with.
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In a contest, this is most certainly misleading and unfair. From what I can see on this form many folks really embrace the journey of these garments–and the journey is what makes this rewarding, the destination (sIcK fAdEZs) is a by-product.
Of course, wear your jeans how you want--take a power sander to them, as long as you are happy who cares. There's no doing it 'wrong'. However, it can't be denied, at least in my opinion, a little bit of the spirit of what makes Japanese denim so awesome is indeed lost when the destressing is blatantly manufactured.
Here's some distressing done on 'amazing' jeans at the factory--makes me chuckle a little from what I've learned about IH's denim.
Never knew i'd be so passionate about...pants
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I guess it’s just different values. I think most here (and certainly I) value imprinting my life on my jeans. I just think it’s cool. It’s why I don’t like buying used jeans that are already faded or especially artificially distressed jeans, which are not only not a reflection of my life in the garment, but typically look shite.
Good things come to those who wait. And it’s a shame to take something as nice as a pair of IH and vandalize them with anything other than living and working in them.
But if that’s what people want to do, it’s their right and I can’t be bothered to care about it.
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@Nkwkfld:
Outside of a contest, and if not pretending otherwise, seems cool that denim is something you can play around with.
I was talking to my wife about the "denim drama" on here as she has a slight interest in IH (or entertaining me while I go on and on about it) and she made a similar point after asking if the dude's jeans were contest jeans. When I told her no, she said something along the line of, 'oh, well who cares what he does then? If it isn't a contest let him to what he wants, so what?' which I agreed with. I get that point entirely and taking away from or talking down about someone's process can border on gatekeeping if dude is just having fun messing around with his jeans.
The counterpoint to this is whether or not the content the user posts on social media is embracing the sandpapering and freely admitting to the process or pretending that he was able to fade them naturally to get those results and trick those viewers who do not have a keen eye to authenticity of natural fades. It seems then to be all about that denim clout which defeats the purpose of just wearing them.
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@Nkwkfld:
Outside of a contest, and if not pretending otherwise, seems cool that denim is something you can play around with.
The counterpoint to this is whether or not the content the user posts on social media is embracing the sandpapering and freely admitting to the process or pretending that he was able to fade them naturally to get those results and trick those viewers who do not have a keen eye to authenticity of natural fades. It seems then to be all about that denim clout which defeats the purpose of just wearing them.
I think these points really sum up my thoughts as well.
@Giles I think I'd also find a denim 'finishing' factory pretty depressing. If people want something the market will make it i guess for better or worse.
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I view all this the same I do people doing "relic'd" guitars. Obviously the best way to get wear and age on a guitar is to just play it and use it for yearssssss. There are some really good guitar makers that do a great job and anyone would be hard pressed to tell if that guitar body is actually a 1959 stratocaster. However, I have see SO MANY nightmare homemade jobs where someone took a belt sander to a newer Fender and it looks so bad and obvious. Jeez. I can't stand it.
Same goes for jeans. Good news is you can just buy a pair of IH jeans new and wear the hell out of 'em for a year and have great results. Don't need to have bought a brand new guitar in 1960 and played the hell out of it for 60+ years to get a similar result!
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Absolutely epic James
Great job, guess they end up nearly white