Current:Home > NewsDurable and enduring, blue jeans turn 150 -TradeFocus
Durable and enduring, blue jeans turn 150
View
Date:2025-04-27 19:02:55
There's bootcut, skinny, flare, ripped, low-rise, high-rise — even blue jean look-alikes called jeggings impersonating the classic denim piece.
They all lead back a century and a half ago, to a Latvian-Jewish immigrant working as a tailor in Reno, Nev., named Jacob Davis. He had a customer whose work pants kept tearing.
To solve the problem, he added metal rivets at the stress points of the pants, making them stronger. According to historian Lynn Downey, the rivets were only part of what made the pants durable enough to withstand a full day's work.
"Denim was a very old fabric that originated in Europe, first in France, called serge denim," Downey told NPR in 2013. "It was the toughest fabric around. And men had worn unriveted denim pants for decades as work wear."
The popularity of the clothing caught on fast, Davis feared someone might rip off his idea.
"He wanted to mass manufacture his product, but he needed a business partner," explained Downey.
So, he teamed up with a dry goods merchant in San Francisco, Levi Strauss. They obtained a U.S. patent on May 20, 1873.
Since then, blue jeans have become a staple in Western fashion and a common thread throughout history.
"When you think of jeans, you think of the sort of prototypical white male cowboy kind of riding off into the sunset that's so synonymous with denim advertising from the late 19th century to today," said fashion historian Emma McClendon.
McClendon explained in a conversation with NPR last February how jeans have evolved with our culture, and have a complex history of their own.
"The reality is that this was workwear that was worn for hard labor. Denim had been worn by enslaved African and African American descendants for generations," she said. "It was worn by Chinese immigrants who were building the Transcontinental Railroad. It was worn by women. It was worn by men. And it came in tandem with really grueling hard labor, which is often left out of a sort of romanticized view."
From coal mines and factories to high fashion runways and MOMA, it's clear jeans have withstood the test of time.
They were even in high demand in the Soviet Union.
Historian Kristin Roth-Ey of University College London told NPR last year the Soviet Union's love affair with denim likely began in 1957, when the World Festival of Youth and Students came to Moscow. The clothing drew thousands of visitors from both sides of the Iron Curtain.
"That was the first time that people started to talk about jeans, because some of the Americans were wearing jeans," said Roth-Ey. "And there was at that time a huge black market that went alongside this festival."
According to Roth-Ey, the demand for jeans only grew during the 1960s, but the government didn't play along.
"The official stance on this is that jeans, like rock music, are initially officially shunned. It's a sign of decadent Western consumerist culture."
Roth-Ey explained that eventually Soviet leaders tried to launch their own jeans in the early 1970s, but were unsuccessful.
The hunger for Western denim was memorialized in a 1980s Levi's ad in which a young man fidgets as Soviet customs officials examine his luggage, but he makes it home with a smuggled pair of Levi's in his suitcase.
The black market for American brands like Levi's, Lee and Wrangler jeans was fueled by high prices. A pair could sell for as much as an entire month's salary at the time.
Blue jeans even survived the work-from-home, loungewear fashion shift.
Sales dipped from $16.6 billion to $12.8 billion during the pandemic, according to Euromonitor International, but they project a comeback for the U.S. jeans market reaching $20.7 billion in sales by 2026.
The analysis firm Research and Markets projects the global jeans market will top $95 billion dollars by 2030.
veryGood! (7889)
Related
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Oprah Winfrey opens up about exiting Weight Watchers after using weight loss drug
- Céline Dion Shares Rare Photo With Her 3 Sons Amid Health Battle
- Boeing plane found to have missing panel after flight from California to southern Oregon
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Mother of boy found dead in suitcase in Indiana arrested in California
- Squid Game Star O Yeong-su Found Guilty of Sexual Misconduct
- British warship identified off Florida coast 3 centuries after wreck left surviving crew marooned on uninhabited island
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- A Georgia senator was exiled from the GOP caucus. Now Colton Moore is banned from the state House.
Ranking
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- School shooter’s parents could face years in prison after groundbreaking Michigan trials
- In close primary race, trailing North Carolina legislator files election protests
- NASA gave Voyager 1 a 'poke' amid communication woes. Here's why the response was encouraging.
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Tennis Star Andre Agassi Applauds the Evolving Conversation About Mental Health in Sports
- Host, radio station apologize for 'offensive' quip about South Carolina star Kamilla Cardoso
- Prosecutors seek from 40 to 50 years in prison for Sam Bankman-Fried for cryptocurrency fraud
Recommendation
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
Nate Oats' extension with Alabama will make him one of college basketball's highest-paid coaches
Prosecutors in Chicago charge man with stabbing ex-girlfriend’s 11-year-old son to death
Horoscopes Today, March 15, 2024
Could your smelly farts help science?
Jets to sign longtime Cowboys star Tyron Smith to protect Aaron Rodgers, per reports
Sewage seeps into California beach city from Mexico, upending residents' lives: Akin to being trapped in a portable toilet
Former Tesla worker settles discrimination case, ending appeals over lowered $3.2 million verdict
Like
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- College Football Playoffs new six-year contract starting in 2026 opens door to expansion
- A ‘Gassy’ Alabama Coal Mine Was Expanding Under a Family’s Home. After an Explosion, Two Were Left Critically Injured