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€27.99 suit in Lidl

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  • 30-09-2009 1:02pm
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 12,382 ✭✭✭✭


    Wouldn't really be my thing, but if you're a young lad who needs a suit or you want a suit for a fancy dress party, it would do the trick!

    The article in the Irish Time is terrible journalism (giving the last word to Louis Copeland? Give me a break!) but here you go:

    http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/features/2009/0930/1224255501851.html
    Lidl is selling cut-price suits, but what’s it like to wear one for a day? And how does the retailer manage to sell them so cheaply?

    SUITS, LIKE furniture, were once made for life, even if the fate of that life was to be spent on a hanger. My wardrobe collection includes a wedding suit (worn twice, at most), a confirmation suit and a communion suit (which, four decades on, I can’t bring myself to part with).

    Since Monday, though, those venerable old models must share closet space with a pushy new arrival, a modest two-piece black number with no great pretensions and a single claim for your attention.

    My “elegant suit for business and formal occasions in a classic cut”, as it was described on the packaging, cost all of €27.99.

    I no longer recall how much my parents paid for my communion suit, but I know it involved hard-won staged payments over a period of months. There were repeated visits to a sombre tailor’s attic in the city centre and I doubt somehow it was paid off with the cost of a steak and chips.

    My “double-buttoned jacket with two front-flap pockets, single back vent and button detail on sleeve”, in contrast, came in a box. I picked it up from Lidl on Dublin’s Thomas Street, by the wastepaper bins and cordless phones, and just over from the scallions and courgettes.

    It’s a sign of how much retailing has changed that you can now buy a suit – not to mention the €6.99 shirt to go with it – in a German-owned discount food shop. And it’s a sign of how much has changed recently that instead of idle boasts about conspicuous consumption, you are more likely to hear people gleefully recounting the bargains they snapped up.

    On the face of things my purchase was good value; but was it the bargain it seemed? Also, if clothes make the man, what sort of man do I become in a Lidl suit? What does quality count for in an era of disposability? And how do big retailers manage to sell such goods so cheaply?

    I took my box back to the office and tried on the suit. Buying a suit in a box, not a good idea – the jacket draped idly over my shoulders, the flaps were creased and the waistband of my trousers was so wide I could have fitted in a few volumes of the Lisbon Treaty and still not taken up the slack.

    Now this isn’t entirely Lidl’s fault; I belong to the gangly branch of the Cullens and oversizing is my way of ensuring the sleeve and leg lengths are optimal. Indeed, my sleeve length was fine and with the help of a belt my trousers offered to defy gravity. Lidl says their suits are “perfect for young men going for their first job or even a student dressing to impress” and I don’t fit either bill.

    Still, I experienced a frisson pulling on the black jacket and striding out manfully among my colleagues. Perhaps I had started to feel like a million dollars in a €27.99 suit. Hamlet, and the sartorial advice handed out by Polonius to his son, came to mind: “Costly thy habit as thy purse can buy/But not express’d in fancy; rich, not gaudy/For the apparel oft proclaims the man.”

    Sadly, my frisson was just static electricity. Polyester is like that, as I should have remembered when I was sold a fake “pure silk” suit for half nothing while on a holiday once in Vietnam.

    But at least my colleagues would be there to pep me up. Wrong again.

    “It’s Lidl man,” said our agriculture correspondent, hitherto better known for his knowledge of wellies and overalls. “That sort of thing gives the recession a bad name.” Others were marginally more generous. It wasn’t bad, “considering”. Someone wanted to know was I “going for an interview”. It would be good for the winter “when it’s dark”. Another colleague – the mother of teenagers, practical as ever – suggested it would be “good for a debs – if you puked on it, you could just throw it away”.

    Out on the streets, people didn’t know I was a man in a cheap suit, but I hardly fared better. My oversized jacket billowed about in the wind and a drunk took a dislike to the “effin’ suit” in his way. So now I was being defined by my suit.

    I popped into Louis Copeland’s to get the view of the city’s best-known tailor. “Worth every penny of €27.99 – and nothing more,” he said, rubbing the fabric between thumb and forefinger. “It’d be great for a young lad looking for his first suit – unless he was going for a job.”

    Louis had me try on the jacket of a Canali suit, which cost the equivalent of 38 Lidl suits but fitted beautifully. I was flattered to hear I have the same jacket size as Barack Obama, who wears this brand.

    Expensive suits are made from fine wool, and much of the stitching is done by hand, Louis tells me. Wool keeps you warm in the winter and cool in the summer, while polyester – well, just think of sleeping on polyester sheets on a warm night.

    This jacket has shape and solidity and feel about it, and the innards, as he shows me, include a breastpiece made from the hair of a female horse’s tail (not a male – think about it). I resolve to buy such a suit one day, but not just yet. . .

    The day is wearing on and my suit is wearing me down. This modelling lark is all very well but I realise that, like many Irish men, I want to disappear into my clothes rather than be noticed for them. Just look around you on the street at all the blacks and greys and the uniforms of rich and poor and you’ll see what I mean.

    Besides, I’m starting to feel guilty about my €27.99 suit. How can a garment like this be made and transported to Ireland and then sold for so little? Under what conditions is it produced, where and by whom?

    There is no indication anywhere on the suit or the packaging about where the suit is manufactured. I contact the supermarket chain’s PR department who tell me they don’t have access to this because it’s “confidential buyer information”.

    But a quick internet search brings up references to a report by ethical clothing campaigners in the UK about the onerous working conditions of garment workers in the developing world whose factories supply Lidl and other chains with cheap clothes. The company has rejected the allegations in the report but I still start to feel pangs of guilt.

    But at least I’ve learned something. As Louis whispered: “If something looks too good to be true, it is too good to be true.” The price of this suit is truly amazing but its value – to this buyer at least – is considerably less.


Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 2,028 ✭✭✭d31b0y


    AARRRGH wrote: »
    ___________________
    Part-time Jobs | Dublin Jobs | Cork Jobs | Galway Jobs | Limerick Jobs | Temp Jobs | Student Jobs

    Nice websites :D


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,809 ✭✭✭Gone Drinking


    Worst thing about the picture of him are his shoes, and he didn't mention anything about buying those in Lidl


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,382 ✭✭✭✭AARRRGH


    Worst thing about the picture of him are his shoes, and he didn't mention anything about buying those in Lidl

    Yeah I noticed that too. When you consider the tone of the article, it's like he wore bad shoes on purpose to make the suit look worse.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,373 ✭✭✭Irishpimpdude


    Woh now everyone can afford to suit up this is gonna be Legend...............ary

    SUIT UP! :D


  • Registered Users Posts: 148 ✭✭spockpower


    Woh now everyone can afford to suit up this is gonna be Legend...............ary

    SUIT UP! :D

    Awesome :cool:


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,096 ✭✭✭✭the groutch


    me thinks the courthouses will be awash with these :D


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,382 ✭✭✭✭AARRRGH


    Woh now everyone can afford to suit up this is gonna be Legend...............ary

    SUIT UP! :D

    I know you're joking but I can seriously see this being the new skanger fashion!


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,373 ✭✭✭Irishpimpdude


    AARRRGH wrote: »
    I know you're joking but I can seriously see this being the new skanger fashion!

    Here's the advertisement campaign and its LEGEND..... Wait for it Aryyyyyy

    Barney_suit_up.jpg


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,824 ✭✭✭ShooterSF


    From experience (I did get lambasted in a previous thread), fantastic wedding gear. Nothing worse than going to a big wedding and worrying about your expensive suit jacket, that looks like everybody elses, draped over a chair as you get pissed. Chances are someone else takes it by mistake or you get drunk and forget it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,344 ✭✭✭ErinGoBrath


    ShooterSF wrote: »
    Nothing worse than going to a big wedding and worrying about your expensive suit jacket, that looks like everybody elses, draped over a chair as you get pissed.

    I agree. No more tears when one of the chunky bridesmaids rips of one of the sleeves amist the dancefloor mayhem when the band play 'Come on Eileen'...


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  • Registered Users Posts: 11,461 ✭✭✭✭Ush1


    Suit looks good, his shoes are the only thing cheap looking.


  • Registered Users Posts: 32,373 ✭✭✭✭rubadub


    Ush1 wrote: »
    Suit looks good,
    Suit looks black to me, like somebody got the magic wand selector in photoshop and just filled it all black. Maybe the photographer got a €15 lidl camera while in there, poor name on the lad "Bryan OBrien".

    In a previous thread somebody was planning on getting one for rolling in the mud at music festivals. I have seen more expensive boiler suits.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,758 ✭✭✭alastair_doom


    Pic on the lidl website, but its only one of their weekly specials so no guarantee theres even any stock anywhere at this stage.

    http://www.lidl.ie/ie/home.nsf/pages/c.o.20090928.p.Menuit

    looks very decent in that pic.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,460 ✭✭✭workaccount


    If I was running this country the bankers would be reduced to buying a suit like this. :D

    Had to laugh though - 28 euro is a ridicously funny price for a suit. It must be made from those clothing banks people can dump their clothes in - and I thought they were given to charities. tut tut.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,096 ✭✭✭✭the groutch


    It must be made from those clothing banks people can dump their clothes in - and I thought they were given to charities. tut tut.

    no those clothes are stolen out of the clothing banks by the eastern europeans who drop those leaflets in your letterbox


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,460 ✭✭✭workaccount


    no those clothes are stolen out of the clothing banks by the eastern europeans who drop those leaflets in your letterbox

    The east europeans must be in the suit business now then.

    Actually I'd love to trace the origins of this suit back to the factory in china where they exploit young children for little money and horrid conditions. Ok maybe I shouldn't be speculative but how can they produce something that cheap. Must be a loss leader or something.


  • Registered Users Posts: 21,625 ✭✭✭✭Johner


    Well I bought one. And im very happy with it!


  • Registered Users Posts: 11,461 ✭✭✭✭Ush1


    I'd imagine all the big brand suits are made in similar sweat shops with expliotation if it's a moral dilemma.:D


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,136 ✭✭✭T-Maxx


    There's already been a thread on this.:rolleyes:

    Stick a different label on it, mark the price up so it seems more reasonable, and sell it through a more exclusive outlet, and most all of the snobbish hypocrites will think "it's grand.":rolleyes:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,460 ✭✭✭workaccount


    T-Maxx wrote: »
    hypocrites


    Explain please.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,382 ✭✭✭✭AARRRGH


    Ush1 wrote: »
    I'd imagine all the big brand suits are made in similar sweat shops with expliotation if it's a moral dilemma.:D

    Exactly. Everything from your shoes to your t-shirts are made in countries with very poor (or non-existant) workers rights.

    If Lidl were charging €500 for the same suit people might feel better...

    T-Maxx wrote: »
    There's already been a thread on this.:rolleyes:

    OH NOES!

    T-Maxx wrote: »
    ck a different label on it, mark the price up so it seems more reasonable, and sell it through a more exclusive outlet, and most all of the snobbish hypocrites will think "it's grand." :rolleyes:

    No, I can spot a cheap suit a mile away. Personally I don't understand how people can wear them on a daily basis.


  • Registered Users Posts: 260 ✭✭kerno


    You could just get a cheap suit and bring it into my friends Tailor shop.. The Zip Yard.. :D


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,929 ✭✭✭Raiser


    T-Maxx wrote: »
    There's already been a thread on this.:rolleyes:

    Stick a different label on it, mark the price up so it seems more reasonable, and sell it through a more exclusive outlet, and most all of the snobbish hypocrites will think "it's grand.":rolleyes:

    Yeah - The worst is the designer bags made by 6 year olds in sweat shops and sold to sweaty women in posh shops at a 800 times the manufacturing costs.

    - I've never bought anything of poor quality in Lidl or Aldi.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,373 ✭✭✭Irishpimpdude


    AARRRGH wrote: »
    Exactly. Everything from your shoes to your t-shirts are made in countries with very poor (or non-existant) workers rights.

    If Lidl were charging €500 for the same suit people might feel better...




    OH NOES!




    No, I can spot a cheap suit a mile away. Personally I don't understand how people can wear them on a daily basis.

    God you must SUIT UP alot... Your standards as nearly as high as mine, I have a suit guy you could use 70% suits only costs about 1k then


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