Business

The History of Blue Jeans in America

While blue jeans are an American iconic style but they were not developed in America. The fabric referred to as “denim” was being made in France in the early 1600s and was employed by sailors in Genoa’s navy. Genoa. This is actually where the word “jeans” comes from – Genoa is known as “genes” in French. Before that, the same cloth, known as “dungaree,” was being made in India near Bombay. The fabric was then made into durable, tough clothing.

It was introduced across Europe through Portuguese sailors who were dressed in “dungarees” while plying their trade on the spice route that connected Europe along far eastern Europe. Far East.

Denim was born. blue jeans were the most popular workwear perfect for the working class in America when Europeans were able to settle in the west during the 1800s and 1700s.

The life was tough in the early days of America when men worked at the farm, mines, and in forests to create an entirely new culture. Denim was the ideal material to wear for work as it could be foundstretch denim material.

In the 1850s, denim was been in use for clothing for work for several years in America and the material was mainly produced by North America at factories such as the Amoskeag Mill in Manchester, New Hampshire.

At the time, the most commonly worn denim outfit was the bib-overall, however, with the introduction of innovations through the Levi Strauss Company in the mid-1850s, trousers without the bib, also known as “waist overalls” – gained in popularity. Despite the robust durability of denim those who wear their jeans for mining, farming, forestry , or other demanding jobs will often see them torn in their areas of the pockets, or even in the bottom.

This was the basis for the most significant American invention – the use of copper rivets in order to give strength to the areas of stress in the pants that were often ripping open. It was patentable in the late 1800s by Levi Strauss, and rivets on the pockets’ corners and at the bottom of the fly were the most well-known elements of American jeans produced by Levi Strauss in their mills in San Francisco. This easy innovation provided Levi Strauss blue jeans unrivaled quality and durability. Within a brief period of time, working men across North America were wearing them.

It was only after that patent was expired beginning of 1890 that other companies were permitted to utilize rivets for strengthening their jeans. As a result, many clothing manufacturers started to imitate Levi Strauss’ design of the original Levi Strauss design.

In the following 50 years, blue jeans remained the casual workwear of both genders working in manual labor across North America. It was not until the baby boomers entered the adolescent years in the 1950s that blue jeans took on an elevated status.

Alongside the rise of rock and roll blue jeans also became a part of the current youth-focused culture that is a major part of American lives to this day.