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Brands that you fon...
 

Brands that you fondly remember not being shit

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invent stuff

Really?


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 1:47 pm
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Karrimor Rucksacks. ... Still got the Hot Ice.

My climbing rucksack is a mid-90s vintage Hot Ice. It still looks brand new.

Karrimor is an interesting one, they're born of the post-war cotton industry in East Lancashire. My bag came direct from their outlet in Clayton-Le-Moors.

Sadly, when the arse fell out of the mill towns things were only ever going to go one way and a lot of companies suffered. The phoenix from the ashes of what was once Karrimor proper is Lancashire Sports Repair in Burnley, the Karrimor brand is Sports Direct these days I think?

U2 have always been bad in my humble opinion.

At high school, you either liked U2 or Simple Minds. I was in the Simple Minds camp, but with the benefit of hindsight U2 had the Edge.


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 2:21 pm
hatter, scruff9252, Harry_the_Spider and 9 people reacted
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So basically, pretty much everything we buy these days is shittier than it was before, and twice as expensive.

That's not what I was trying to say, more that the market tends to reward those that reduces quality in search of greater profits as consumers are now accustomed to very low prices.

Quality is out there but you have to look for it a bit more and expect to pay an equivalent price to what you used to have to pay for the legacy brands back when they still made stuff properly and weren't run by VC money men.


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 2:28 pm
jameso and jameso reacted
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I was going to say Berghaus, but then they're not gash like Karrimor now are, and I'm not sure if they were ever top tier stuff 30 years ago.

IMO 30 years ago they were the dogs danglies, but that may have been completely misplaced. I guess its their abundance in Go Outdoors / Sports Direct etc and providing for the masses that may have tainted this unfounded belief.


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 5:33 pm
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*apart form a few of Googles cool party tricks, the Galaxy is a much better OS and phone.

MrsDoris has one of the latest Samsung Galaxy phones. It has some built-in adware from a random Israeli company that you can't remove or disable, which pops up every now and again demanding that you install all these 'great' apps (free games and such). Well dodge.


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 5:48 pm
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Still using a Karrimor Hot Earth 40l day sack from the 90s (before the lardy tossbandit got his hands on the brand).


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 6:12 pm
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MrsDoris has one of the latest Samsung Galaxy phones.

I'm ambivalent towards Samsung as a brand, but I've yet to use one of their Android-based phones which wasn't gash. I don't understand why they're so popular.


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 6:54 pm
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MS windows.. I could go on all day... but why are scroll bars now miroscopicaly thin?


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 7:44 pm
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Guys, I think we missed something. Cougar2 - "At high school, you either liked U2 or Simple Minds. I was in the Simple Minds camp, but with the benefit of hindsight U2 had the Edge." Absolutely excellent


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 7:44 pm
Cougar2, brokenbanjo, ThePinkster and 3 people reacted
 mert
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It could be worse though, it could be the Bixby button on Galaxy’s which wasn’t mappable.

It was, it just unmapped itself everytime Samsung updated the OS or security software...

invent stuff

Really?

Pretty sure apple haven't actually invented anything, just patented anything they can get their grubby little mitts on. And then put it in a shiny box.


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 7:54 pm
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Guys, I think we missed something. Cougar2 – “At high school, you either liked U2 or Simple Minds. I was in the Simple Minds camp, but with the benefit of hindsight U2 had the Edge.” Absolutely excellent

I think I was more college age, but (unpopular opinion): I liked both Oasis and Blur!


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 7:55 pm
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Facebook is unusable now. Was great when launched, much simpler and with a clear purpose


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 8:12 pm
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I’m ambivalent towards Samsung as a brand, but I’ve yet to use one of their Android-based phones which wasn’t gash. I don’t understand why they’re so popular

Well the zoom is rather impressive. Miles ahead of everyone else. Less keen on the size and weight of a small brick.

I want to like the folding phones but any screen that can be scratched by finger nail is farcical.


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 8:27 pm
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My Karrimor walking boots lasted about 25 years.

Rodeo from C&A were a decent brand.

Also Dubarry boots.


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 8:52 pm
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Intel


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 9:10 pm
thols2 and thols2 reacted
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Google

It used to be much better

Now its just revenue generator software


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 9:19 pm
kelvin and kelvin reacted
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Sega


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 9:25 pm
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My pal has a pair of Karrimor panniers, they must be 30 years old, they're still a vibrant purple. He did need to buy new straps/buckles as the old ones had perished.


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 9:28 pm
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Most German automobil manufacturers. Mercedes rust like crazy, certainly the Sprinters do. VW and BMW not what they once were.

North Facce is for the most part just a fashion label now.


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 9:41 pm
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MS windows.. I could go on all day… but why are scroll bars now miroscopicaly thin?

It's an option under Accessibility.

And, it's a pain in the arse. See also, hiding file extensions.

Facebook is unusable now.

https://www.fbpurity.com/


 
Posted : 04/11/2024 9:58 pm
walleater and walleater reacted
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I think there's two issue here:

Once excellent brands/companies that have regressed and now produce objectively worse products

Once excellent brands that have been sold, and who's name/logo are now being stencilled onto any old tat to try to cash-in on any remaining halo-effect of quality.

I think the latter is far more prevalent.  Karrimor is definitely the latter - As are The North Face who were sold in 2000 to the same people who then later went on to own Timberland (which would explain some things) and Eagle creek.  I have a few pre-2000 Eagle Creek duffle bags which are absolutely indestructable - they have spent some years in the wilderness, producing shite, but bought one last year (they have now been re-sold to somebody else), and again the quality seems to be decent again.

I think this is a factor or "founder/CEO" vs a CEO that treats the brand like a commodity.

Maybe there is something here about us getting old?  That what would now be regarded as the hipster/bouji brands of our youth have since been passed-on / sold by the founder to organisations who just see them as numbers on a spreadsheet - and thats just part of a brand's life cycle?

Although it's sad to turn away from brands that were once "aspirational" in our youth -  as consumers we now have fantastic access to smaller/newer brands who we never would have noticed pre-internet - and the quality of these often far exceeds anything you can buy in the shops.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 12:02 am
scruff9252, kelvin, scruff9252 and 1 people reacted
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Maybe there is something here about us getting old?

There's another thing about this I've noticed. As you get older the perception of time passing quicker impacts my expectations of product longevity.

For example, something like a t-shirt that would have lasted me from age 18-21 seemed like a long time, after all so many things happened in that time. If a t-shirt lasted me from age 41-44 I'd perceived it to not have lasted very long. All that happened in that time was a couple of holidays maybe a change of job and a few more grey hairs.

That said, my 1997 purchased Berghaus Polartec 300 fleece is still my go to for cold. The Patagonia R1 I bought last year already looks like it's wearing out.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 12:45 am
kelvin, chakaping, kelvin and 1 people reacted
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Russell Brand. Well, he was always a bit shit but now he's shitter.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 4:33 am
kelvin, redthunder, kelvin and 1 people reacted
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Turner bikes, from back when they were Turner Suspension Bicycles


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 7:32 am
kelvin and kelvin reacted
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Some of the team that were responsible for the original Karrimor backpacks make military versions. So you can still buy the quality product as long as you don't mid looking a bit like a Walt.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 8:48 am
zbonty, kelvin, zbonty and 1 people reacted
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Still wearing a mid-90s Karrimor fleece jacket, in stylish burgundy obvs. So I don't need to even try a MIke Ashley version.

Some of the team that were responsible for the original Karrimor backpacks make military versions. So you can still buy the quality product as long as you don’t mid looking a bit like a Walt.

That's cool, and just get a camo one then nobody will see you anyway.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 9:55 am
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Wychwood Brewery, that is to say Hobgoblin beer. Now owned by Carlsberg Marstons, original brewery recently closed. Sadly now a far inferior product


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 9:55 am
kelvin and kelvin reacted
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I have a Karrimor Hot Rock rucksack bought in New Zealand in 2008 and it's still in use a few times a week. Has lasted really well over the 14 years. I guess it's from post "going downhill"?

Alpkit still do some great stuff but they sell a lot of too similar items now and have a very broad range of clothes. It's harder to pick out the good stuff. Also their yo-yo pricing is annoying. Don't buy anything without there being a sale or a discount code.

On the other hand, Sonder bikes seem the best they've ever been


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 10:48 am
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Thanks Nickc. As they have black and grey options, that’s where my next pack is coming from.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 10:58 am
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Wychwood Brewery, that is to say Hobgoblin beer. Now owned by Carlsberg Marstons, original brewery recently closed. Sadly now a far inferior product

Hate to break it to you, but Marstons have pulled out of the joint venture and are now just a management company for their pub chain.

On that note Carlsberg, famous for making the third worst Lager in every pub, but actually the brewery pioneered modern beer production and did a lot of the microbial research on it.  Bottom fermenting yeast is named Saccharomyces Carlsbergensis after them.

I have a Karrimor Hot Rock rucksack bought in New Zealand in 2008 and it’s still in use a few times a week. Has lasted really well over the 14 years. I guess it’s from post “going downhill”?

It seemed to happen 2006-2012ish

I lived in sports direct karimoor trainers at uni. They were great.  Then they must have changed factories around 2007 and they lasted a few months at most.

My last pair of walking boots fell apart, my OH's are still in one piece (they get worn less, but still doing pretty well).  Just seems to depend if it's coming from an old design and an old factory or something that Sports Direct have made themselves with the lowest bidder.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 11:15 am
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Northern England.Yobby,dreggy dump these days.Few honourable exceptions of course.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 12:50 pm
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I also still have a Karrimor Jaguar from circa 1987 in my loft, the one without the side pockets but with rails to attach the extra ones if you wanted to an 80L backbreaker... had to get this one as really wanted the Alpiniste but my mate had one in the purple and just had to be different. Anyway, it would still be perfectly usable today - and one of the reasons for that if my early stage product obsessive geekery serves me right is that it was made with Cordura fabric. This fabric was so good, so tough and felt pleasing to hand, even today I would regard these types of fabric as a gold standard. And yet the reason modern equivalents disappoint is the unnecessary light-weighting of any outdoor products for marketing goals, to the point that you rarely see fabrics like Cordura being used- and instead get a 'high performance' pack that gets a hole in the base on your second trip out just because you took it off near a rock.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 12:55 pm
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Ehh? Our Fiesta is about to turn 21 and the only rust is just starting to appear on the inner door skins.

sample size of 1 ?


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 5:03 pm
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Our Fusion (tall Fiesta) is also 21 and rust free.

Sample size = 2


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 5:25 pm
chakaping and chakaping reacted
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Rohan when it was all about a pair of bags and or a pair of superstriders.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 5:31 pm
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The North Face, it all went downhill after they shut the Port Glasgow factory. The factory sale gear was proper outdoor gear, tents s/bags etc. Now it's designer gear catering for casual wear. Still have lots of the old gear, a guy from Ni had a shopping list from his hill walking club 2 grand bill  .


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 6:06 pm
 a11y
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The factory sale gear was proper outdoor gear

I've still got a North Face 'Wasatch' backpack bought at factory sale in early 90s. (Ab)used daily through high school, then through uni, then on various travels/holidays. Still going strong although relegated to weekly rather than daily use. Highly doubt the replacement NF 'Router' bag I bought in 2018 will last as well.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 6:18 pm
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Roach made some great riding clothes and protection when there wasn't much else available. Got bought by raceface and it all went rats.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 6:28 pm
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Our Fusion (tall Fiesta) is also 21 and rust free

My 53 plate Mondeo was effectively dead from rust (doors and sills) 12 years ago.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 7:20 pm
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Findus. Raleigh. ITV.

I gave a Karrimor Jaguar away. It weighed about 2.5kg empty.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 7:33 pm
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The mental gymnastics people do to make excuses for cost cutting, corporate greed and blatantly ripping people off is the funniest thing. Keep those straight faces boys!


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 7:46 pm
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The phoenix from the ashes of what was once Karrimor proper is Lancashire Sports Repair in Burnley,

I did not know the latter was spawned from the former. Karrimor went bust as *someone* was fiddling the books and they got a bit overextended. The brand was then snapped up by the Ashley and joined the rush to the bottom. ME used to be a proper rufty tufty outdoor brand, made in Glossop, used on Everest. They also overextended and were bought out by an Italian fashion/outdoor conglomerate (IIRC). Their gear is still decent quality but a bit fussier than it used to be - and not used up Everest quite so much.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 8:50 pm
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Another hot ice here in red/grey and have some pouches that fit (deep purple and never sat very well).


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 9:17 pm
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Yes I've got a Karrimor rucksack that is maybe 30 years old that gives good service......once a year if even that.

It's easy to get nostalgic about kit you've had for years because you rarely use it. Like whoever it was ^ that has the twenty year old walking boots, only one way that comes to pass.

Old people always think things were better in the past. I think I prefer a modern rucksack with a breathing back, such as something by Osprey. Half the weight also.

Fogies!!


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 9:27 pm
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endoverendFull Member
I also still have a Karrimor Jaguar from circa 1987 in my loft, the one without the side pockets but with rails to attach the extra ones if you wanted to an 80L backbreaker

mine dates from about 92. Went round the world with it for a year. it fell out of the luggage compartment of an overnight coach and was recovered (not everyone whose bag fell out got them back). So it’s got some over stitching in the top pocket. Still gets used for festivals (I’ve had an couple of different travel backpacks with stashable straps since). although when I tried to use the side pockets for the first time in decades found I’d only got one of the four clips needed. The fabric is still in good condition and th3 coating is still intact.


 
Posted : 05/11/2024 9:44 pm
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