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The Jeans are made of better material than my 501xx jeans that I own. Not to discount the 501s as they are awesome as well. The denim in the Gustins is superior and the stitching seems up to par with durability.
The workshirts are the coolest ice ever seen. Made of superior thick denim and the pattern is vintage. I won't be wearing to work that often but could certainly do so. They definitely stand out from anything available commercially or from other USA Brands. The only other workshirts I've seen like these are from Ciano Farmer and cost 250 dollars each.
The dress shirt is very nice too. Heavy ticking stripe. Fits more contoured than the work shirts.
I got size XL Classic in the workshirts and XL in the Dress shirt. 5-10 180lb man. I wear a Large in similar Carhartt/ Wrangler Flannel and Work shirts. definitely size up like I did as Gustin runs more true to vintage sizing that is smaller than typical American workwear. All their models are thin and not taller than 6' from what I can tell. If your big and tall this brand may not be for you.
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I guess the number of bad reviews is just probably equal to the number of folks with bad experiences.The clothing is exceptional.
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While there has been no progress in terms of quality over the years, Gustin is quite facile with the excuses though. I was told recently that Gustin has an official size tolerance between left and right leg of up to 1/2鈥? What?!?!?! I have been wearing cheap GAP jeans for 25 years and I have never encountered any issues with different leg sizes on a pair of jeans, or loose rivets. Gustin should be embarrassed. I would be.
GUSTIN, try this: get better at quality control instead of being creative with the excuses for poor craftsmanship. Look carefully at each step of your production line and fix the problems. This should be achievable since your production is local! Understand this, Quality is expected when you charge $80-$200+ for a pair of jeans! And, Jeans is your bread and butter so get this right before veering off on silly sneakers and t-shirts, etc.
This would have been a one star review. I am giving a second star for decent customer service.
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Enter Gustin. I really like their concept. No waste, no over-packaging. You get really good denim, probably the same as mid-tier brands like APC, Edwin and al. Only very specific mills like Pure Blue Japan's or Iron Heart's for example, will produce more exclusive, proprietary denim that you can't find anywhere else.
Of course there are downside to ordering raw denim online, some not specific to Gustin: do NOT go by the pictures of what the jeans look like on their website but by measurements. And bear in mind that even though sanforized, the jeans WILL shrink. Depending on how hot you wash them (best wash them cold) you will lose 1 inch in the hem, for example, maybe 2 if you wash really hot or very often. The waist will shrink but then loosen with wear so you should more or less order the right size from the word go.
What's specific to Gustin is the looong waiting time, 2 to 3 months, but you know that when ordering. Another potential downside is they don't do refunds, they do store credit, if you change your mind or have a problem. I don't mind that, but it's something one should know beforehand. One of my jeans developed a fault (due to the original weave, not to Gustin), and they gave me instant store credit, without haggling. I would say, from my experience, that their customer service is excellent.
Another detail I really like: the fashion of the day seems to favor super high-rise jeans, but Gustin favors a reasonable mid-rise, which is great. If you actually look at most super duper high-end denim brands, a lot of them might use great denim, but they would benefit from hiring a designer…
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Quality of materials and manufacture means nothing if the sizing is all wrong, which puts me off buying any more from them.
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Jeans — I have owned lots of their jeans and they all seem to fail miserably to the point of comedy. From busted seams (on non-stressed areas like the lower calf area), buttons/rivets falling off, screwy sizing, they have covered all the shortcomings you could imagine.
Shirts — poorly sewn seams that came apart, a tall-sized shirt with short arms, buttons that fall off (I had to sew 6+ buttons back on one shirt before I finally gave up and Goodwill'ed it), to screwy sizing.
CPO jacket — I actually sort of liked it except for one thing: the snap buttons constantly jangled. Like to the point of irritation. I sold it.
Beautiful fabrics that promise so much but just poor execution. It could be so good but they never seem to have it together. Never again!
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They truly are the Wal-Mart of selvedge – you get what you pay for.
Despite their spotty craftsmanship, and recognition of the problem, their customer service is really the worst of any brand I've ever experienced. I've interacted with Matt Kong and Ren Sanchez on multiple occasions, and both should be fired. Not sure about the third person whose name appears in their email signature. worst. ever.
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– Jeans – good, well made, good value (talk about being led on)
– Jeans (heavyweight) – two rivets fell off. Gustin refused to replace, nor repair, sent rivets to me suggesting I fix them
– Sweatshirt – a product of awful quality…given to charity after 3 washes
– 3 pack white Ts; never delivered, refunded after 5 months
– Baseball shirts – never delivered (I don't think they ever made them) but they did charge for them. Refunded after several months
– Card holder – good
– Denim apron – good, excellent in fact
– Ultra heavyweight jeans – laughable sizing bearing no relation to their size guide nor their "order one size larger" instructions- returned (at my cost). No refund. Gustin doesn't give refunds. So I asked, repeatedly that they send the replacement product marked clearly as replacements so that I wouldn't have to pay customs charges…for a second time. They demurred then said they'd look at it. So I have had to pay 3x courier charges and 2x customs charges (now running at over $100) all because of their mistakes.
Re the replacement products:
– Shirt – Poor manufacture standard, poor design, poor fit
– Jeans – still not here.
I think their jeans could be great value. But…their quality isn't nearly as good as they portray. Their other products have (cardholder aside) been universally poor.
But the biggest issue is their service. Its awful. They aren't a trustworthy company and once you have paid their sole aim is to retain the revenue, not delight, not to satisfy.
It is genuinely better to pay a bit more and go with a company that you can trust.
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3 months waiting and 120 dollars for this poor jean
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All of their various denims are priced very appropriately, based on their characteristics and source — nuanced, heavyweight Japanese denim barely breaks $100, while staples from North Carolina's Cone Mills can be had for less. Construction is also solid; certain high-end details such as hidden back pocket rivets and 100% cotton thread are absent, but the hems are chainstitched, the fly is selvage, and the jeans hold up to heavy wear as well as any other. Definitely a step above department store brands, and on par with well-known Italian and French brands.
Highly recommended for fans of raw denim or the newly-interested. The jeans are a great value.
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