I never owned a pair of blue jeans until I met my second wife.
Every man's closet should be dark pair of blue jeans, a black jean, and a mid wash jean.
I just start with a pencil and paper. I don't want something too trendy, too fashion-forward. I don't want to make something I consider a regular person couldn't wear with blue jeans. But I don't want to make something that other people make, either - like a skinny black suit in a shiny material that you can buy anywhere.
I'm into a casual-dressing girl: blue jeans and a tank top is super sexy.
Like Hollywood movies, MTV and blue jeans, fast food has become one of America's major cultural exports.
Growing up in Oakland, we did things like white t-shirt, blue jeans and Nikes. That was my get down, how I was going to rock. And if you look at me right now, I'm pretty much black tee, blue jeans and some sneakers.
When I go out or to an event, I'll wear blue jeans and a shirt. And sometimes when I go to an event I'll wear camouflage. It depends what kind of mood I'm in.
There are things in American culture that want to wipe the class distinction. Blue jeans. Ready-made clothes. Coca-Cola.
Blue jeans are the most beautiful things since the gondola.
Fifty years ago, it was the dream of every bohemian artist to be seen getting out of a limousine wearing blue jeans and sneakers. Today, it's the dream of probably half the people in the country.
I'll never throw away my blue jeans.
Being a playwright is like the equivalent of doing a jigsaw puzzle that has 1,500 pieces, and it's a jigsaw of a blue sky. Not a cloud in sight.
I sell blue sky and coloured air.
In age of consumerism and materialism, I traffic in blue sky and colored air.
If you live in the States, you see the windmill signal on your smartphone all the time. It's like living in Beijing air. You have to remember the blue sky.
Dark economic clouds are dissipating into an emerging blue sky of opportunity.
As a female pilot, the sacred rose garden in my heart is the motherland's blue sky.
I'm a 'blue sky thinker' and dream big.
We can still do a stop motion feature for about one-third of what it costs Pixar or DreamWorks or Blue Sky to make a feature. But nobody is interested in a film that cost $50 to 60 million with the potential to do $120 million. They want to risk big money to make huge money.
When I was in graduate school in consumer science and math, all of the big companies had labs, all doing blue sky research.