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Upgrade your wardrobe with these cropped pants, designed to merge sophistication and wearability. The tailored fit ensures ultimate comfort during long days or nights out.Introducing the Super Sonic Printed Slim Pants by Free People, a must-have for your streetwear collection. Crafted from 100% cotton, these low-rise, slim-fit pants offer a chic look with utility pocket and tucked pleating details. A vibrant patterned design in "Great Combo - Farmhouse" coloring enhances the appeal. With an inseam of 26.25 inches and rise of 10.5 inches, these pants feature a front button and zipper closure. Care - Machine wash and lay flat to dry. Imported.

Free People Super Sonic Printed Slim Pants In Great Combo - Farmhouse In Sand
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First seen in Jul 2025
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FREE PEOPLE
Super Sonic Printed Slim Pants In Great Combo - Farmhouse In Sand

$168

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Free People Super Sonic Printed Slim Pants In Great Combo - Farmhouse In Sand
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Free People Super Sonic Printed Slim Pants In Great Combo - Farmhouse In Sand

Super Sonic Printed Slim Pants In Great Combo - Farmhouse In Sand

Upgrade your wardrobe with these cropped pants, designed to merge sophistication and wearability. The tailored fit ensures ultimate comfort during long days or nights out.Introducing the Super Sonic Printed Slim Pants by Free People, a must-have for your streetwear collection. Crafted from 100% cotton, these low-rise, slim-fit pants offer a chic look with utility pocket and tucked pleating details. A vibrant patterned design in "Great Combo - Farmhouse" coloring enhances the appeal. With an inseam of 26.25 inches and rise of 10.5 inches, these pants feature a front button and zipper closure. Care - Machine wash and lay flat to dry. Imported.

about FREE PEOPLE
Back in the 1970's, a young man named Dick Hayne planted a seed in the maze of streets and trees that make up West Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He opened a store and called it Free People. Free People nurtured the young people who lived there and shopped there, who looked for a little of their own freedom in the clothes they wore. As Dick's store grew from one to two, the name was changed from Free People to Urban Outfitters. In time, his wife Meg came on to tend Urban's private label division, which supported product exclusive to Urban Outfitters. Demand was almost immediate and to meet this overwhelming need, she and Dick decided to create a wholesale line. It was very well-received, so much so that Dick separated the businesses. For a while, the wholesale line took on many personalities: Bulldog, Ecote, Cooperative, Anthropologie, and then in 1984 a new life was breathed into the name Free People. And that's us. During 2001, we realized that it was really Free People that invoked some of our favorite images, those of femininity, courage, and spirit. It was time to get back to our roots. Free People shed its junior image and evolved into a more mature, contemporary brand. This allowed twenty-something women to appreciate the line of clothing that catered to their intelligence, creativity and individuality, while keeping with its great quality and affordability. And that's just who we wanted to reach: a 26-year-old girl, smart, creative, confident and comfortable in all aspects of her being, free and adventurous, sweet to tough to tomboy to romantic. A girl who likes to keep busy and push life to its limits, with traveling and hanging out and everything in between. Who loves Donovan as much as she loves The Dears, and can't resist petting any dog that passes her by on the street.
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