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Subject:
People who wear jeans
Category: Relationships and Society > Cultures Asked by: wantstoknow-ga List Price: $4.19 |
Posted:
11 Jun 2002 09:28 PDT
Expires: 18 Jun 2002 09:28 PDT Question ID: 24340 |
What is it that jeans are so popular, at least in the United States? To me, they're the most uncomfortable pants style ever invented. Why anyone would willingly wear clothes made of stiff, thick cloth when so many other options that are more comfortable are available I don't understand. Do people wear jeans just to look like everybody else, or do they really think they're more comfortable or somehow better than other styles? |
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Subject:
Re: People who wear jeans
Answered By: rebeccam-ga on 11 Jun 2002 10:18 PDT Rated: |
Hi Wantstoknow! While it's impossible to explain why some people find a given fabric comfortable vs. uncomfortable, the history of jeans provides ample explanation for their unparalleled popularity. There's a great page ( http://www.levistrauss.com/about/history/denim.htm )about the history of denim (and another fabric called jean, oddly enough), how and why it came to be used in clothing, and its transition from workwear to fashion staple. The following excerpt describes that transition: "By the 1920s, Levi'sŪ waist overalls were the leading product in men's work pants in the Western states. In the 1930s, Western movies as well as the West in general captured the American imagination. Authentic cowboys wearing Levi'sŪ jeans were elevated to mythic status and Western clothing became synonymous with a life of independence and rugged individualism. Denim was now associated less often with laborers and more with the rugged American now symbolized by John Wayne, Gary Cooper and others. During World War II, American GIs took their favorite pairs of denim pants overseas, guarding them against the inevitable theft of valuable items. When the war was over, massive changes in society signaled the end of one era and the beginning of another. Denim pants became less associated with workwear and more associated with the leisure activities of prosperous post-war America. Levi Strauss & Co. began selling its products nationally for the first time in the 1950s. Easterners and Midwesterners finally got their first chance to wear real Levi'sŪ jeans. By 1960, the company had changed the name of its most popular product. Until the 1950s, the famous copper riveted pants were referred to as "overalls." When you went into a small clothing store and asked for a pair of overalls, you were given a pair of Levi'sŪ jeans. After World War II, however, Levi Strauss & Co.'s customer base changed dramatically from working adult men to leisure-loving teenage boys and their older college-age brothers who called the product "jeans." By 1960, Levi Strauss & Co. decided that it was time to adopt the name, since these new, young consumers had adopted the product." It continues: "In 1964 a writer for American Fabrics said, "Throughout the industrialized world denim has become a symbol of the young, active, informal, American way of life. It is equally symbolic of America's achievements in mass production, for denim of uniform quality and superior performance is turned out by the mile in some of America's biggest and most modern mills. Moreover, what was once a fabric only for work clothes, has now also become an important fabric for play clothes, for sportswear of all types." By the next decade, the trade papers made comments such as: "Jeans are more than a make. They are an established attitude about clothes and lifestyle." (There is a paper available online, written for a Material Culture course at the University of Toronto, called 'The Gentrification of Blue Jeans' that examines jeans' rise to popularity more closely... But it's a little hard to read, the background is denim :) http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/history/material_culture/cynth/ ) I hope this answers your question. If you'd like any clarification or further information, let me know! Best, Rebeccam-ga I searched: history of jeans ( ://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&querytime=mGE93B&q=history+of+jeans ) jeans popularity ( ://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&q=jeans+popularity ) | |
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wantstoknow-ga
rated this answer:
Well-done answer. |
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Subject:
Re: People who wear jeans
From: authorshelper-ga on 11 Jun 2002 10:52 PDT |
I don't wear jeans ALL the time, but here are a few practical reasons why people wear them: 1) You never have to worry about what to wear with them...just about everything goes with a great pair of jeans. 2) They come in a wide range of sizes, including lengths, which make them fairly reliable for people with long legs. 3) They're durable and dust off easily if you've been working in them. 4) The basic design hasn't changed much over the years, and *is still available* so even if I can't find any of this season's "fashion" pants that fit or look good, I can always find a new pair of jeans. 5) Habit! They were the uniform for many of us who came of age in the 70's, and some of us never completely outgrew the habit, even though new fabrics and styles have come along that admittedly improve upon those old denims. |
Subject:
Re: People who wear jeans
From: tfederman-ga on 11 Jun 2002 11:21 PDT |
For what it's worth, I don't consider jeans uncomfortable at all. Shrug. |
Subject:
Re: People who wear jeans
From: seedy-ga on 11 Jun 2002 16:13 PDT |
Well Wantstoknow: I'm a little offbeat in my reasons to wear jeans. Jeans fit tight in the crotch which makes them feel like your wearing a tight, conforming, sort of jockey short....with long legs. I wonder if brief men wear jeans more than boxer men?? Now perhaps I should ask a question of that sort to confirm my own feeling. When jeans fit well, they are rootin, tootin, walk with a swagger kind of pants. All teh other kinds of pants have that extra fabric in the crotch that doesn't give you that rootin, tootin, kind of feeling. Now, I know my comment is not supported by any links or any survey information...and it may not feel the same way to everyone who wears them, but I just had to add my two cents to the answer because I was facinated by your question and the comment came to me instantly... Thanks for asking seedy |
Subject:
Re: People who wear jeans
From: robertw-ga on 13 Jun 2002 07:07 PDT |
Being from Oklahoma, It isn't socially acceptable to wear you cowboy boots without a pair of jeans. So if you like boots... |
Subject:
Re: People who wear jeans
From: dlpm-ga on 18 Jun 2002 14:03 PDT |
> clothes made of stiff, thick cloth New jeans may start out a bit stiff, but after they've been worn and washed once or twice, the fabric becomes much softer. The density of the fabric makes them hard to tear, they are slow to absorb most stains, and they "breathe" so that your legs stay warm in a draft but don't get overly warm during energetic work or play. The kids in my area don't have required school uniforms but they all wear one anyway -- jeans and a Tshirt: always in fashion and no chance of wearing the "wrong" thing. |
Subject:
Re: People who wear jeans
From: ia-ga on 25 Aug 2002 02:05 PDT |
Girls do look very sexy in tightly fitting jeans. Different people choose clothes for different reasons. There are people who mostly choose their wear clothes for look, attractivity & fashion. There are different sort of people who care only about comfort of clothes, less about look. I know that jeans have appeal for both these kinds of people. |
Subject:
Some People Claim That I'm Being "EGOTISTICAL"
From: sergeantshultz-ga on 16 Jul 2003 16:20 PDT |
Hell I don't even know what that means.... I GUESS IT HAS SOMETHING TO DO WITH THE WAY I FILL OUT MY SKINTIGHT BLUE JEANS!!! <'(((>< |
Subject:
Re: People who wear jeans
From: agga-ga on 30 Sep 2003 23:54 PDT |
When I was a kid I absolutely hated those shrink-to-fit jeans because they were so stiff. Wore shorts literally every day to 7th grade; living in San Diego made this possible. Then I transferred to a private school that mandated pants, and it was back to those unconfortable-as-anything 501s. Then Levi's introduced Silver Tab jeans, the first big name baggy jean, in the early 90s, and I found them so much more comfortable; I wore them until I got to college, at which point it was back to shorts with baggy jeans worn in the winters. The point is, I agree with your assessment of old-fashioned, 501 type jeans, but not of baggier styles. |
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