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Monday, March 20, 2006

Play it again, pants: Levi's introduces iPod-compatible jeans

Jeans giant Levi's is hoping to woo fashionistas and music aficionados alike with its new iPod-compatible RedWire DLX jeans, due out this fall.

With a joystick remote control built into the watch pocket, the new jeans will allow wearers to play, pause, track forward or back and adjust the volume on their iPods without having to take them out of their pockets.

A separate pocket will house and conceal the bulge of the iPod, while a built-in retractable headphone unit is designed to prevent tangled wires.

A red conductive ribbon will keep wearers connected while allowing them to remove the iPod from their pockets to view the screen, the company said.

"The Levi's RedWire DLX jean is the latest extension of the Levi's brand leadership position, by merging fashion and technology that provides consumers with the most innovative way to enhance their portable digital music lifestyle," Robert Hanson, Levi's US brand president, said in a statement.

"In designing the jeans, we considered both function and fashion -- the result is a uniquely functional -- yet stylish -- great-fitting jean."

The high-tech togs will roll out worldwide in the fall, the company said.

Levi's jeans are sold in more than 100 countries.

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Levi's makes you feel like a princess

Perhaps I'm not the best person to offer a critique of Levi's new site for their Princess Fit jeans, since I'm a dude and all. Still, I followed the bespectacled fairy godmother guide as she led me through the site, telling me all about the new jeans. The site is entertaining for awhile, and you can choose whether to poke around on your own or let the fairy godmother guide you. Still, there's not much of a payoff, just stuff followed by more stuff. It's an amusing journey, just one that doesn't really wind up anywhere. At least, nowhere that really makes staying with this updated Cinderella story worthwhile.

[via Brand Candy]

Levi’s US – “The Original Levi’s”

A guy is working on his levi's, and makes it rugged and natural, using different tools at his place. Just looks natural, probably like his own! Once he gets the piece, he goes to his girlfriend, and presents the same piece to her. She is taken aback, since the Levi's seems to be very close to the guy, and something which he could not part with. But he did it now, just for her! What an inspiring token of his love for her! She is visibly impressed. She sees him off with this emotional note, which is equally reflected in the guy's emotions also.
But as soon as the bus starts off and he is sure that the girl cant be spotted anymore, he gets up from his seat, takes off his trousers...and sits comfortably with his "Original" Levi's that he had worn inside!

Pretty interesting! A good background score supplements the motive and talks about the “Attitude” of the Levi’s guy, along with the importance that is given to an Original Levi’s!
As is evident from the Ad, if I need to associate words with both the ads, it would be “Mischief”, “Smart”, “Shrewd” and “Self-centric” for the latter, and “Mild”, “Easy going”, “Soothing” and “Relaxed” for the former. On a behavioral perspective, the US Ad works more for “Type-A” personalities, whereas the European Ad works more for “Type-B” personalities.
Also, the US Ad talks more on the lines of “Attitude” of a Levi’s, whereas in the case of the European Ad, it talks about the “aloofness” , the “Charisma” and “Independent power” of a Levi’s guy.

Incidentally, these are the same keywords one would use, when both the regions – US and Europe, have been compartmentalized and perceptions are measured vis-à-vis these areas. This presents a perspective of the Ad world in both the regions, and their orientation. Though it is too premature to generalize this observation, but am sure it gives me an incentive to work more on this line.
A single product and its advertising in 3 different regions – US, Europe and India….For India, the story is again different. Wait for another post on this.

Gap , Levis

I caught the tail end of a recent study on CBC the other day which found that Gap, Nike and Levis are now industry leaders in Canada when it comes to factory transparency etc. I missed the name of the study and GOOGLE has yet to be any help in finding more facts about this study. Did anyone else hear the spot? It was Wednesday morning around 10'ish (PST)...

My Levis Jean

woke around 11+ in the morning, actually it is no long morning but early afternoon. Funny i slept early the day before but woke up late. First start of the day a bad new came to me, my bro told me the LCD of the digi cam is not functioning, man i need to bring go for servicing tomorrow since the service do not open on sundays... haiz.... what a bother.....
Didn't do much had an early lunch and started planning how am i going to go around doing my final year project. It was around 2pm when Kok Liang gave me a call asking me wanna go town to accompany Shiling, Lay Hung and Cai Hong to do their shopping.

The Trio
Made up of Shinling, Lay Hung and Cai Hong, these three girls seem to be inseperatable since secondary school days. When Kok Liang and I met them, they seem to finished their shooping already. Cai Hong suggested that we go check out the new NYDC at Heeren. When we got the man it was really packed with people, so we ended up in Swensen. I had chicken baked rice but it was kind of sucky, lose out to the V6 chicken baked rice at Bugis.

The Jean
After Swensen, Lay Hung and Cai Hong need to head home. Left Shiling, Kok Liang and I then i suggested we head for Heeren since my current jean is going to be wear out soon. At Heeren i saw a really cool pair of jean, it is actually more to the unique side much to my liking but it cost $179.50. !!!! some more no discount.
In the end I decided not to buy from that shop, Kok suggested that we go Queensway to check out and by the way he can buy his new pair of bball shoes. At queensway, i came across the same pair of jean after much bargain i only manage to pull the price down to $170, since i came all the way here already i didn't care much and i bought it.

Denim Jeans - Fashion History

Where did the name Denim Jeans come from?
'Serge de Nîmes'
Genoese
Levi Strauss the Inventor of Trousers called Denim Jeans
Film Stars in Denim Jeans Influence the 1950s
1970's Flower Power and Jeans
Levi 501s
Designer Jeans
Lycra in Jeans
Buying Gap Jeans Today - Large Sizes for All

'Serge de Nîmes'
In fashion history, jeans and denim history continues to baffle. No one truly knows the perfect answer to where jeans began. As so often happens fashions often emerge together in various parts of the world and are the result of the sudden availability of a new fabric, cloth, dye or technique.

But we do know that the phrase denim jeans is thought to derive from several sources. No one is totally certain where the words come from. A majority of source books suggest that denim derives from the English translation of the South of France French phrase 'serge de Nîmes'. Denim fashion history is thus associated with Serge de Nimes.

It may well be that the fabric which was made in France also had a version made locally in England and was called by the same name of denim in the same way that Cheddar cheese is called cheddar all over the world. The Serge de Nîmes was originally a wool silk mix, twill weave. Certainly by the 19th century in England denim had a white warp and a navy woof (weft). Denim was considered a hard wearing sturdy fabric, ideal for heavy labouring.

Genoese
It is also thought the name ' jeans ' comes from 'Genoese' the name for Italian sailors of Genoa who when at sea dressed in blue fustian fabric composed of a cotton and wool or linen blend. Genoese fabric was imported into Britain as far back as the 16th century.

Thomas Hardy used the word fustian to describe basic clothes of a skilled countryman in 'The Mayor Of Casterbridge.' He mentions a fustian waistcoat, breeches and a jacket all the type of garments often made up in jeans material today. In Pickwick Papers fustian is described by Dickens as 'common fustian' which firmly puts it in the everyday category.

In the 19th century American weavers made hard wearing cotton duck, denim and jeans fabrics to satisfy a home market. At some time some manufacturers must have replaced the yarns with the locally produced, more readily available cotton making the fabrics all cotton.

Levi Strauss the Inventor of Trousers called Denim Jeans
Jeans history would be nothing without Levi Strauss. Levi Strauss is credited with inventing jeans. Levi Strauss emigrated with his family to New York in 1847. His family sold dry goods such as canvas tenting and Manchester drapery goods. He moved to San Francisco in the early 1850s because he thought the same dry goods business would be brisk because of the California gold rush.

About 20 years later a solvent Levi Strauss and a Nevada tailor joined forces to patent an idea the tailor had for putting rivets on stress points of workman's waist high overalls commonly known as jeans. Levi Strauss chose to use the stronger denim fabric and cotton duck, putting his own name on the product. Later the duck fabric was dropped as consumers found denim more comfortable, particularly after washing creating the faded bloom on the indigo blue dyeing that we all love.

Eventually in the 1950s people asked for denim jeans or just as often - Levi's jeans rather than waist overalls. Other manufacturers began to produce jeans and other brand names such as Lee Coopers and Wranglers also became famous. Each brand is renowned for having a particular cut.

Film Stars in Denim Jeans Influence the 1950s
Jeans fashion history was truly made in the 1950s when film stars wore it in movies that the teenagers of the day followed with avid interest.

For many years jeans were only used as work wear clothes, but by the 1940s they were considered leisure wear in America. Once pop and film stars like Elvis Presley, James Dean, and Marlon Brando sported them they became desirable internationally in the 1950s and are associated with rock and roll and pop music. Later in the 1960s, jean brands old and new were worn universally in the western world.
Picture of Marlon Brando in jeans and leather jacket.
1970's Flower Power and Jeans
In the 1970s individuals began to really personalize flared bell bottom versions of jeans with bells up the sides of flared jean's legs. Floral and abstract textural embroidery, metal eyelets and studs, transfers, appliqué and even anti-war graffiti biro writing were all popular forms of decoration. Jeans were a great hit with flower people and the hippie revolution. Jeans were the only uniform to wear to a 1970's pop concert.

Jeans never seemed to die as individuals would cut off the legs to make Bermuda shorts, then short shorts or even duffle bags using a cord to draw up the waist loops. Old jeans got recycled into patchwork jeans and skirts.

Levi 501s
The most famous jeans are still probably those produced by Levi as Levi 501s. Pre shrunk jeans had been introduced in the 1960s. 501s traditional button fly jeans designed in the Victorian era need to be shrunk to fit. They were a huge hit again in the 1980s when reintroduced to a new generation.

In a television advertisement Nick Kamen removed his jeans and stripped to his underpants at a launderette. He proceeded to launder the jeans making them 'shrink to fit' to the music of Marvin Gaye's 'I heard it through the grapevine'. Kamen helped make them into a new fashion item for a new generation with the link to sexual allure.

Designer Jeans
By the 1980s ripped, frayed and torn jeans were a normal sight. Coloured jeans from white through to pastels were also popular as were stonewashed blue jeans. In the 80s, designer jeans with names like Gloria Vanderbilt, Calvin Klein and Armani among so many fashion designers, became the designer label jeans to be seen in. Stone washed jeans became a must.

By the 1990s black jeans were very popular for a while and jeans in general were seen a lot in the early 1990s. But shades of blue are always loved and sometimes the darkest shade is high fashion and sometimes the most washed out faded pairs become the hottest. Coloured jeans of all shades made an appearance.

In 2000 designers were crystal beading and silver or gold spraying jeans amid tears, frayed slashes, fur and feather decoration. Denim was hot yet again and used to make everything from footwear, jackets, bags, basque corsets to jewelled cuffs.

Picture of a denim jacket with a trim.
Lycra in Jeans
The 1990s saw some changes such as denim with an added percentage of Lycra to enhance fit and comfort. Jeans are most definitely here to stay as 50% of us under 60 like to wear them, easily preferring them to combat trousers which are now considered very passé. Jeans with lycra are so much more comfortable. They fit and cling around the buttocks in a way that accommodates less than perfect figures. Marks & Spencer stock a very wide range of own brand jean styles and you have 90 days to return them if they don't fit.

Buying Gap Jeans Today - Large Sizes For All
You can get a wide range of sizes of quality jeans from internet and high street stores such as The Gap.

If you are large you will almost certainly be able to get the size you want from the Internet.

Levi Jean History











How were blue jeans invented? It's a simple story.

Levi Strauss came to San Francisco in 1853, at the age of twenty-four, to open a west coast branch of his brothers' New York dry goods business. He had spent a number of years learning the trade in New York after emigrating there from his native Germany. He built his business into a very successful operation over the next twenty years, making a name for himself not only as a well-respected businessman, but as a local philanthropist as well.

One of Levi's many customers was a tailor named Jacob Davis. Originally from Latvia, Jacob lived in Reno, Nevada, and regularly purchased bolts of cloth from the wholesale house of Levi Strauss & Co. Among Jacob's customers was a difficult man who kept ripping the pockets of the pants that Jacob made for him. Jacob tried to think of a way to strengthen the man's trousers, and one day hit upon the idea of putting metal rivets at the points of strain, such as on the pocket corners and at the base of the button fly.

These riveted pants were an instant hit with Jacob's customers and he worried that someone might steal this great idea. He decided he should apply for a patent on the process, but didn't have the $68 that was required to file the papers. He needed a business partner and he immediately thought of Levi Strauss.

Jacob wrote to Levi to suggest that the two men hold the patent together. Levi, who was an astute businessman, saw the potential for this new product and agreed to Jacob's proposal. On May 20, 1873, the two men received patent #139,121 from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. We consider that day to be the official "birthday" of blue jeans.

Although denim pants had been around as work wear for many years, it was the first use of rivets that created what we now call jeans. "Waist overalls" was the traditional name for work pants, which is what these first jeans were called. The word jeans became more popular around 1960 when the baby-boom generation adopted the term for its favorite type of pants.

Sometime during 1873, the first riveted clothing was made and sold. (We're not sure of the exact date because we lost all our historic records in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire.) Jacob Davis was in charge of manufacturing when Levi Strauss & Co. opened its two San Francisco factories.

The denim for the riveted work pants came from the Amoskeag Mill in Manchester, New Hampshire, a company known for the quality of its fabrics. Within a very short time, all types of working men were buying the innovative new pants and spreading the word about their unrivaled durability. Around 1890, these pants were assigned the number 501, which they still bear today.

Holding a patent on this process meant that for nearly twenty years, Levi Strauss & Co. was the only company allowed to make riveted clothing until the patent went into the public domain around 1891. When the patent expired, dozens of garment manufacturers began to imitate the original riveted clothing made popular by Levi Strauss & Co.

So, the next time you see someone wearing a pair of Levi's® 501® jeans, remember that these pants are a direct descendant of the original pair made in 1873. And it was two visionary immigrants, Levi Strauss and Jacob Davis, who turned denim, thread and a little metal into the most popular clothing product in the world - blue jeans.

Lynn Downey, LS&CO. Historian