Skinny Jeans are comfortable for all.
Skinny Jeans looks so attractive than the other
types of jeans.
Skinny Jeans gives the best look to your lower body
. Skinny Jeans enhance the shape of your legs.
Skinny Jeans are available in all colors and styles.
Skinny Jeans looks perfect on women having thin legs shape.
The very last pair will soon be peeled, agonizingly, from very sore legs, and although the imprint of seams and zips and buttons will, with time, fade, the smarting humiliation that sensible women (
yes, including me) actually wore this garment outside, in public, will take a lot longer to recover from. Let me first of all explain how the “
skinny” (how condescending that a garment has the daring to tell you what your body shape needs to be in order to wear it) came into being, having not been seen since the Fifties anywhere but on the legs of on the streets winos.

Skinny Jeans
Well, of course we have
Kate Moss to blame. She was photographed leaving her house in
North London wearing a very
low-wasted black pair of very
skinny (
in fact, I would say anorexic)
jeans by a then little-known brand called
Superfine, an unflattering, messy style which had obviously been borrowed from her equally thin boyfriend,
Pete Doherty.
She wore her
black skinniest with flat shoes, and I remember thinking at the time that for once she had got it wrong. Only women who are 6ft should wear skinny jeans; I have seen the model
Gisele Bundchen in a pair, teamed with a tan and a pair of
Havaiana flips flops, and she looked naturally stunning. In hers,
Kate Moss, who is on the short side, managed to look even more
Dachshund-like than normal.

Skinny Jeans
But the unpleasant truth about the
fashion industry is that, if we are told a look is “cool” and “edgy” about a million times by women who work at Grazia and Vogue, we will finally start to believe that something which makes us resemble the underfed offspring of
Max Wall looks, ooh, quite nice actually, and maybe I should try a pair?
And so, women everywhere entered the dark years.
Just as we had all got used to a gratifying
boot cut, with a slightly hipsters waist that gave us stretched out legs and a nice round bottom, we had to squeeze ourselves, lying flat on the bed each morning, into a garment that simply displaced all the fat elsewhere, so that it ooze unappealingly where it could, such as over the top of the waist (
it’s no wonder smock tops were so hot last summer).

Skinny Jeans
The worst thing of all is that they make a woman’s bottom look about two feet lower than it actually is, so instead of having a high, resolutely curved rear, you are left with a baggy matter halfway down to the back of your
knees. For the past two summers I have seen so many women, millions of them, red in the face, nervous about the fact their thighs look like a
Shar Pei’s forehead, desperate to dash home, peel the wretched things off and get into tracksuit bottoms.
The
denim manufacturers have been rubbing their hands with glee while all this has been going on.
Blue jeans have been enjoying something of a rebirth in the past five years, with UK sales increasing by 40 per cent. Who would have thought a common utility garment would have such, well, legs?

Skinny Jeans
The first “
designer” jeans, by
Gloria Vanderbilt and
Fiorucci, emerged in the 1980s, quickly followed by the super brand developed by
Calvin Klein in the early 1990s. But it wasn’t until the late 1990s, a time when fashion had started to look to the female celebrities in
Los Angeles as style leaders, that the comfort, exclusive, high fashion jeans labels started to emerge because, let’s face it, the only thing women in LA want to wear is jeans because they want to show off their figures without seeming to try too hard.
Now that
good jeans can be bought on
High Streets (
Top shop has 15 variations on the skinny, including wet-look drainpipe and drainpipe corset) and in supermarkets nationwide, the
denim business has become so big and so profitable that manufacturers have had to come up with ever more creative and unlikely ways to make us buy ever more pairs.