Jeans are in their genes: Montreal's Superior Pants celebrates nearly 100 years
The Superior Pants shop on Ste-Catherine Street doesn't have a website and doesn't advertise, yet it hass managed to stay in business for nearly 100 years.
It's also known as one of the best places to find a pair of jeans in the city.
Mitch Stroll, the fourth generation to run the store, is a "jeans savant" for his uncanny ability to size up customers and find their perfect brand and fit.
"I always ask them: what colour are we looking for? What type of style are we looking for?" he told CTV News. "And we don't talk numbers and we don't talk sizes."
His father, Owen, who works alongside him, says he's almost always right.
"He knows what to give them. He gets the fit right on one, two, three."
The family has been in the clothing business since Charles Stroll opened the store in 1924.
At the time, he sold men's pants and suits. According to Owen, jeans started to come into vogue in the 1950s and 1960s, and by the 1980s, denim was their primary business.
He says the store's hands-on service sets it apart from chains. Pants are hemmed in the store, free of charge.
"They come here special because they'll get their pants fixed right away and go home with it. No going to a tailor," he says. "It's a package deal."
Mitch says it's the kind of experience that you can't get with online shopping, and once customers find a pair that fits, they usually come back.
With no advertising or website, they rely on word of mouth.
Lucille Phlipart, who is from France, said her friends told her about the store.
"Usually, when I walk in a store, I think it takes me like an hour to find the jeans, and they don't fit. There's always something wrong," she says. "Here, I got two pairs, and it was really quick."
While jeans are in the Stroll family genes, Mitch says he's likely the end of the line.
But he's planning on spending the next 25 years helping customers find the right pair of jeans.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
They came from Jamaica for work, now they're homeless and out thousands of dollars in lost wages
Abuse of Canada’s temporary foreign worker program has left a group of carpenters from Jamaica 'destitute' after an Ottawa company refused to pay them for nearly half a year of work.
TIFF audience prizes for 'Life of Chuck,' Hip doc; Rankin among Canadian winners
'The Life of Chuck,' an offbeat film by writer-director Mike Flanagan, wins the People's Choice Award at the Toronto International Film Festival.
Vance doesn't back away from false claims about migrants in Ohio even amid threats to the community
Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance did not back away on Sunday from the false claims he and Donald Trump have been making that Haitians in an Ohio community are abducting and eating pets, even as the state's GOP governor and other officials insist there is no evidence of such behavior.
Air Canada deal avoids shutdown, brings relief to passengers and business groups
Travellers, business groups and politicians expressed fervent relief on Sunday after Air Canada and the union representing thousands of its pilots negotiated a new labour deal and averted a disruptive, countrywide shutdown.
Queen Victoria's favourite Tuscan villa for sale for more than US$55 million
Once a favoured holiday destination for Queen Victoria, and reputedly described in one of the greatest works of Italian literature, the Villa Palmieri is steeped in history and could now be yours – if you have more than €50 million (US$55 million) lying around.
Liberals will let Conservatives hold non-confidence vote 'fairly soon', no intention of proroguing Parliament
The Liberals have no intention of using procedural tactics to delay the Conservatives' promised non-confidence motion, and they have no plans to prorogue Parliament to hold onto power, according to Government House Leader Karina Gould.
What are your rights as a neighbour in Canada?
If you have beef with your neighbour and you feel it's gone too far, what should you do? A personal injury lawyer has some advice.
4 years ago, a 'Trump Train' convoy surrounded a Biden-Harris bus. Was it political violence?
Texas jury will soon decide whether a convoy of supporters of then-U.S. president Donald Trump violently intimidated former Democratic lawmaker Wendy Davis and two others on a Biden-Harris campaign bus when a so-called 'Trump Train' boxed them in for more than an hour on a Texas highway days before the 2020 election.
Hundreds of wolves, bears and coyotes killed in attempt to help Quebec caribou
In recent years, hundreds of wolves, bears, coyotes and other animals have been killed under Quebec government programs to help the caribou survive. However, the Environment Ministry does not know whether these controversial measures aimed at controlling cervid predation are effective.