Appreciate the lead....no going. Trying to find industrial grade in a 31 to 32 waist with 36 inseam.... If I go to a 34 waist.....my butt looks big! Hehehe!
Look for bobsstores.com I think that's the right site name. Bob's clothing stores have a good selection of work clothes such as one would wear for construction, etc.
I probably would have let it go if not for the "Tartan" on his slip-tie. I may have asked something to the effect of; "Why do Scotts wear kilts?" (Sheep can hear a zipper a mile away) I took a right-cross with dignity. I did make it to the bar..ordered two tap Pearl.....and offered a toast to sheep p**s! We were drinkin buds the rest of the night.
Parents and Grandmother still live there. Also have a Japanese guest arriving...friend of family. I have some interesting questions for our guest, as he has been appointed Chairman of the Japanese Finance Commission a little over a year ago. I'm presenting him my copy of The Virtue of Selfishness....we'll see how this goes over.
Didn't say or mean that... 'comfortable' is fine... but many took that to the 'sloppy' extreme. Like many guys have....
Around the early 1970s, I was the first guy in my engineering department to lose the narrow black tie and go to the more au-courant colored and wider ties. Others followed. Some time in the late 80s, I lost the suit-and-tie costume for customer visits and on-site presentations, and the customers appreciated that, too, since they had wanted to lose the monkey-suits and formality so that real work and communication could happen without the facades. I only wore a suit and tie for customer presentations where serious cultural standards had to be met... some corporate guests from Europe and the Far East saw me in that garb, but as soon as the presentation was over and I headed back to my cubie, I lost the tie and jacket. Ah, me... such a maverick. In my own mind, anyway... :)
and
http://www.farmandfleet.com/
They'll both ship to you.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=428RLz9X...
Like many guys have....
Around the early 1970s, I was the first guy in my engineering department to lose the narrow black tie and go to the more au-courant colored and wider ties. Others followed.
Some time in the late 80s, I lost the suit-and-tie costume for customer visits and on-site presentations, and the customers appreciated that, too, since they had wanted to lose the monkey-suits and formality so that real work and communication could happen without the facades.
I only wore a suit and tie for customer presentations where serious cultural standards had to be met... some corporate guests from Europe and the Far East saw me in that garb, but as soon as the presentation was over and I headed back to my cubie, I lost the tie and jacket.
Ah, me... such a maverick. In my own mind, anyway... :)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mL7n5mEm...
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