A crew-neck Goodfellow & Co tee and a pair of no-fuss Universal Thread or Goodfellow jeans can be had for forty dollars, or less during a Target Circle week, online capsule-wardrobe guides establish that formula as the floor for a versatile closet. It is said that a plain tee and jeans go anywhere.
They don’t go anywhere. They go a long way, and then they hit a wall you can see coming. This is where the wall sits, and how to squeeze every inch out of the range before it.
The First Section Of The Receipt
Prices follow the sales numbers, so you could regard these as static.
- A men’s Goodfellow crew is usually around ten dollars, a couple more for the heavier “vintage” and pocket cuts that hang better.
- A women’s Universal Thread crewneck costs about ten dollars, an A New Day sculpt tee about fifteen, and a Wild Fable crew often six or less on clearance.
- Goodfellow’s straight fit men’s jeans are in the low to mid twenties with hundreds of reviews at four and a half stars. Universal Thread high-rise wide leg jeans are around thirty-six dollars.
From the top of your head to your hip, you’re into it for thirty-five, fifty dollars. Hold that number. It makes a difference at the end.
The Wide Middle Where It Just Works
The reputation is earned across one large band, everything with no dress code and most things with a soft one. Nobody looks twice, in the good way.
- Grocery store, hardware store, any errand where you just need to be dress for your body shape.
- Weekend anything, from a hiking trailhead to a friend’s backyard.
- Coffee, a casual lunch, a relaxed first date.
- Office casual or casual Friday attire.
- Travel days, when ‘looking awake’ and comfort both count.
- School pickup, dog walks, the whole low-stakes half of a week.
It’s All In The Fit And Fabric
The tee and the jeans are not really the variable. Two people in the same ten-dollar crew can look forty dollars apart, and the difference is never the price tag.
Why A Cheap Tee Can Read As Sharp Or As A Rag
- The weight of the fabric also matters. A thin jersey is transparent and will cling to everything underneath it, whereas heavier cotton, like the ones Target sells in its vintage and pocket cuts, will keep a clean line in the wash.
- The seam at the shoulder should just cover the outer edge. The hem should go to around mid-fly. If either of these locations are wrong, a shirt looks sloppy, no matter how new.
- Lighter colors show wear and tear sooner. White or pale heather gray show dinginess most, black fades easily, while navy or dark heathers seem to last longest.
That’s Because Of The Denim’s “Stretch” Quality
- Universal Thread wide-leg jeans are made from 79% cotton, 1% spandex, and 20% recycled cotton. The jeans are stretchy (thanks in part to spandex), and comfortable all around. But that’s also why a higher-stretch pair bags at the knee by the end of the day.
- A dark, clean rinse reads dressier and covers up more. A pale, distressed wash reads casual and caps how far up the outfit can climb.
- Cut dates a look faster than price does. Straight and wide legs look fresh, but a skinny pair pins the outfit to an older year on sight.
Requires Three Levers To Move It Up A Tier

Same tee, same jeans, different result.
- Shoes carry more than anything else. Clean white leather sneakers or loafers lift the whole outfit; beat-up runners drag it back down. Nothing changes the read this fast or this cheaply.
- One layer buys a whole occasion, as a tucked tee under an unstructured blazer or decent overshirt takes the whole weekend up a notch, and Target stocks both at the same price point.
- Fixes read like money, a jeans hem that breaks once at the shoe, a tee that’s dried to the right height, not shrunk past it. None of it costs a lot of money, but it’s all the difference between “put together” and “grabbed off the floor.”
Where That Ends, Styling Does Not Help The Outfit
As honest as I can be, some doors are locked and pretending otherwise is how people show up wrong.
- A business-formal office. Tailored separates are the floor there, and a jersey tee has no answer for that.
- In black-tie and formal weddings. The dress code exists for the precise purpose of keeping it out.
- Funerals or services where dark formal wear is appropriate.
- Restaurants with a jacket rule; venues that display a dress code.
No dress code, the tee and jeans win. If it’s a soft dress code, they win because of the help, but if it’s a hard dress code, they lose, and the fix is a different outfit.
The Cost-Per-Wear Math, And Where It Leaks

Cheap only counts as value if it lasts. Be honest about your numbers.
- A thirty-six-dollar pair of jeans worn twice a week for 52 weeks drops under 40 cents a wear. A ten-dollar tee in heavy rotation gets there even faster.
- That wide-leg pair has been likened to designer cuts, which might cost several times the price, some past two hundred and fifty dollars. What you skip is finishing and fabric, not the shape.
- They leach value at the thin tees. They pill. They lose the collar elasticity. The white ones go dingy in less than a year of hot washes. Buy the hefty cut. Wash cold. Hang dry. You can get one to outlast three flimsy ones. The jeans almost always outlive the shirts.
But Just How Far Does It Go?
Easily, across the no-dress-code half of your life, for about the price of a single designer shirt. Add better shoes and one layer and it walks into soft dress codes without a fuss. Point it at a hard dress code, and it stops dead.
That is a wide range for forty dollars, but not an endless one. The guides that call it endless are selling you the idea, not the tee.

