American made guitars are still some of the best. Fender, Gibson, PRS, Collings and more. All USA made and BIFL.
PS: Ukuleles from Hawaii (the "k" brands).
EDIT for clarity: I am specifically referring to the USA made models. Many companies, including Fender, Gibson and PRS (not Collings) sell less expensive models made in other countries.
A lot of fender guitars/basses are made in Indonesia and Mexico. Hell, some of the best fenders ever made were made in Japan and are highly sought after.
Same thing with Gibson. The others I don’t have any knowledge of.
I am specifically referring to the American made instruments. OP did not ask about the Japan, Mexico and Indonesia made, which are at this point undeniably well made.
Now that you mention it I'm struggling to come up with any other nation's brand of guitar. Like I know some low end budget Ovations are made in Korea, Fender makes their cheaper guitars in Mexico etc. but like...name me the Volkswagen or Toyota of guitars that's a home grown major international brand based outside the US?
Socks from Darn Tough Vermont are about as long lasting as it gets for socks. They are pricey but I've bought a pair or two a year starting in 2018 and I have yet to have a hole in any of them, and they've been worn a lot and have seen some things.
'for life' is a pretty tall order for shoes, but with available refurbishing, I have had two (identical) pair of Mephisto cap-toe shoes for... About 22 years?
Both have been sent back, rebuilt and returned more than once.
Also, about as comfortable as running shoes. If you are stuck in a suits-required career field, do yourself a favor.
While there's some degree of QC issues, benchmade knives.
I've owned about a dozen over the years, and still have most of them. The ones I don't have I gave to people I know. Every single one is still in great shape. The worst of them is the first I ever had, a model 710, and the only thing wrong with that is the tip being slightly rounded from before I got better at sharpening and had good gear to do so.
I actually have three of that model, one a special edition that's dressed up all fancy, the original one, and a brand spanking new copy of my first one that was dead stock that got sold off just this year.
I've also got other models, though I tend to give those away since I'm so happy with the design of the one I carry (the 710). I only buy them if they're way underpriced because benchmade is usually way more expensive than most brands, even other us made ones. That means I usually buy them with gifting in mind, and just use it as an excuse to play with it a little.
A caveat though. You have to be careful where you buy them. Amazon has had a bad track record of accepting fakes as returns, and eBay is flooded with fakes from the makers as well as resold amazon fakes. So you have to be able to identify a fake to be certain the deal you're seeing is a deal and not a scam.
The original 710 I have was purchased the year they came out, which I think was 99 or 2k, but I can't promise my memory is right on the exact year, though it is around that time.
Even if it had been 2001, that's 23 years of carrying the same knife almost everywhere, and carrying it at least part of every day. I took the thing camping and abused the hell out of it, including batonning with the damn thing. If you don't know what that is, you won't get how stupid it is to do with a folding knife of any type, or how impressive it is that the knife survived, much less did so without anything bragging breaking.
But, that's when you take a knife, and use it to split wood by slamming another piece of wood against the back of the knife. It breaks fixed blade knives sometimes, it's meant to be something you'd only do in an emergency because a knife just isn't the right tool for splitting wood of any kind other than maybe balsa.
It got to the point that even when I carried another knife it was alongside the 710 because I could, and do, trust that damn knife with my life.
I haven't abused other benchmade folders as much, but I have put them to hard use. Never had a single failure, even of the one spring that is commonly a problem that needs replacing.
There's other knives just as reliable. But not that exceed the track record I have, and not that are us made
Oooh, that is a damn disappointing miss. Especially considering current prices on them.
Gotta say though, if you can save up, they're one of the best feeling balisong on the market. Just so damn smooth, even the heavily used ones. I regularly regret selling the one I had. I never actually carried it though, and I needed the money in a major way.
I have a whole set of older Craftsman handtools that were made in the US and they are excellent. I have some other Dewalt tools that were made in Taiwan which are less so, but still much better than tools made in China.
Those old craftsman tools were fucking legit. And if they ever did break, you could just go get another one at Sears. Craftsman was a god damn national treasure. Crap now tho.
I’ve got some pretty good wooden kitchen utensils still going strong. My cast iron skillet is pretty solid as well. I can’t tell you if they were e in this country though. Probably not.
I've always wondered what the limits are for headstones, since you're supposed to own the land. Can you erect a giant veiny phallus and just make your eternal neighbors jealous?
Same here, I’ve recently been experimenting with 2.5mg edibles. Still a decent amount of anxiety but somewhat tolerable. I’m not sure if I’ll ever be able to enjoy weed again
I always wanted an MFLB. Those were dope. I haven’t thought about the MFLB in a decade, thank you
Kirby vacuums. They're pricy because they basically do door to door selling and there's a huge markup. For example the starting price the guy quoted was 2k, I declined a few times and he went down to 1k. I later got one from my parents who bought one but didn't like how heavy it was.
They are monsters. It's basically a small shop vac with a ton of attachments, including a carpet shampoo scrubby thing. Replacement parts are easy to find 3rd party and I've never really had to repair it except replacing a belt and removing hair from the brush. Pretty sure they have lifetime warranties too.
I saw a quasi-infomercial on youtube that cast Shopsmith as just that (esp against planned/forced obsolescence). IIRC, they are the only in-usa manufacurer of bench-grade power tools, or something. If only i had a bunch of extra cash and garage space! :)
I associate Shopsmith with that awkward transforming "It's a lathe! It's a drill press! It's a table saw!" thing that can only be described as "cockamamie."