expired Posted by minntwins | Staff • Nov 8, 2024
Nov 8, 2024 3:40 PM
Item 1 of 4
Item 1 of 4
expired Posted by minntwins | Staff • Nov 8, 2024
Nov 8, 2024 3:40 PM
Cotopaxi: Up to 50% Off Sale Items + Extra 10% Off: Women's Abrazo Fleece Jacket
& More + Free S/H on $99+$50
$120
58% offCotopaxi
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The proud wearer could preach about the great little company that supposedly sewed together scraps of waste fabric into quality "sustainable" clothing.
Once they built a name for themselves the easiest and most profitable way to expand was mass production.
Now days it's all low quality stuff made in places like China, Malaysia, & the Philippines.
Every piece is identical and mass produced by near slave labor like most garments but in their advertising and on the cardboard tags on the products they still selling the narrative of the small ecofriendly mostly American-made company.
They were never actually a small struggling business just marketed really well as such by the already very wealthy founders. Who have since sold a large portion of the company to one of the largest megacorporations in the world, Bain Capital.
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The proud wearer could preach about the great little company that supposedly sewed together scraps of waste fabric into quality "sustainable" clothing.
Once they built a name for themselves the easiest and most profitable way to expand was mass production.
Now days it's all low quality stuff made in places like China, Malaysia, & the Philippines.
Every piece is identical and mass produced by near slave labor like most garments but in their advertising and on the cardboard tags on the products they still selling the narrative of the small ecofriendly mostly American-made company.
They were never actually a small struggling business just marketed really well as such by the already very wealthy founders. Who have since sold a large portion of the company to one of the largest megacorporations in the world, Bain Capital.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
The proud wearer could preach about the great little company that supposedly sewed together scraps of waste fabric into quality "sustainable" clothing.
Once they built a name for themselves the easiest and most profitable way to expand was mass production.
Now days it's all low quality stuff made in places like China, Malaysia, & the Philippines.
Every piece is identical and mass produced by near slave labor like most garments but in their advertising and on the cardboard tags on the products they still selling the narrative of the small ecofriendly mostly American-made company.
They were never actually a small struggling business just marketed really well as such by the already very wealthy founders. Who have since sold a large portion of the company to one of the largest megacorporations in the world, Bain Capital.
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