Denim History Timeline

From the founding of Levi Strauss in 1853 to the present day—trace the milestones of denim history: how a humble workwear fabric became a symbol of rebellion and was ultimately rediscovered by Japan's repro artisans.

37 milestones

Origins

–1872
  1. 1853 USA

    Levi Strauss opens for business in San Francisco

    Amid the Gold Rush, Levi Strauss opened a wholesale dry-goods business in San Francisco, supplying miners with sturdy fabrics and goods—the seed of a future denim empire.

Birth of the Jean

1873–1900s
  1. 1873 USA

    Patent for riveted work pants (#139,121)

    Tailor Jacob Davis and Levi Strauss patented copper-riveted "waist overalls," reinforcing pocket corners with metal—the direct ancestor of the modern jean.

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  2. 1886 USA

    Levi's adopts the Two Horse leather patch

    Levi's introduced the leather "Two Horse Brand" patch, depicting two horses unable to tear the jeans apart—used until the switch to a Jacron paper patch in 1955.

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  3. 1889 USA

    H.D. Lee Mercantile Company founded

    Henry David Lee founded his company in Kansas as a grocery and dry-goods wholesaler, later growing into a formidable rival to Levi's through its own workwear.

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  4. 1890 USA

    The lot number "501" is born

    Levi's introduced the internal lot number "501" for its XX-denim waist overalls—the model destined to become the most famous jeans in the world.

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Workwear Golden Age

1900s–1940s
  1. 1905 USA

    Cone Mills White Oak opens; Levi's Type I (506XX) debuts

    Cone Mills' White Oak plant opened in North Carolina; the same year, Levi's debuted its first denim jacket, the Type I (506XX, originally a "Blouse").

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  2. 1911 USA

    Lee begins manufacturing its own workwear

    Lee shifted from wholesaling to manufacturing, releasing the one-piece "Union-All" coverall in 1913, which was adopted by the U.S. military in WWI.

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  3. 1915 USA

    Cone Mills becomes the exclusive 501 selvedge supplier

    Around this time White Oak became the exclusive supplier of selvedge (redline) denim for the 501, its 3×1 right-hand-twill XX denim becoming a Levi's hallmark.

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  4. 1924 USA

    Lee launches the "101 Cowboy Pants"

    Lee released the "101 Cowboy Pants" for working cowboys, evolving along its own path with left-hand-twill denim and distinctive details.

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  5. 1925 USA

    Lee replaces back-pocket rivets with bartack (X-tack)

    Lee removed back-pocket rivets that scratched saddles and furniture, replacing them with bartacks—about 12 years before Levi's adopted hidden rivets (1937).

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  6. 1926 USA

    Lee 101Z pioneers the zipper fly

    Lee released the zipper-fly 101Z (sources cite 1926/1927)—an innovation decades ahead of Levi's own 501Z in 1954.

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  7. 1928 USA

    Sanforization is established

    Sanford Cluett perfected the "Sanforized" pre-shrinking process, curbing shrinkage after washing and paving the way for mass-produced ready-to-wear jeans.

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  8. 1936 USA

    Levi's "Big E" Red Tab appears

    Levi's sewed a red tab reading "LEVI'S" in capitals onto the back pocket; this "Big E" remained a key vintage marker until the lowercase "e" arrived in 1971.

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  9. 1937–1966 USA

    Levi's adopts hidden rivets

    Levi's covered back-pocket rivets with fabric—"hidden rivets"—to prevent scratching furniture and saddles, a feature kept until the switch to X-tacks in 1966.

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  10. 1939 USA

    Hollywood Westerns popularize jeans

    Through Western stars like John Wayne, jeans spread across America as "cowboy attire"—a first step from workwear toward an all-American icon.

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  11. 1944 USA

    WWII rationing forces simplification (S506XX)

    Wartime rationing painted on the arcuate stitch and introduced donut buttons and other simplifications—the "S" in models like S506XX stood for "Simplified."

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Rebellion & Fashion

Late 1940s–1960s
  1. 1947 USA

    Cinch back removed; Wrangler 13MWZ launches

    Levi's removed the rear cinch from the 501; the same year, Blue Bell launched the Wrangler 13MWZ Cowboy Cut, designed by Rodeo Ben.

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  2. 1953 USA

    Levi's Type II (507XX); Brando in "The Wild One"

    The Type II (507XX) arrived, dropping the cinch for side adjusters; the same year, Marlon Brando turned denim into a symbol of rebellion in "The Wild One."

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  3. 1954 USA

    Levi's 501Z (zipper fly); Monroe in "River of No Return"

    Levi's released the zipper-fly 501Z; that year Marilyn Monroe wore jeans in "River of No Return," helping normalize denim for women.

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  4. 1955 USA

    Switch to Jacron paper patch; Dean in "Rebel Without a Cause"

    Levi's moved from the leather to the Jacron paper patch; the same year, James Dean made jeans the uniform of youth in "Rebel Without a Cause."

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  5. 1961 USA

    Bob Dylan and the Greenwich Village folk scene

    At the heart of New York's folk revival, Bob Dylan and other youths wore workwear denim as a badge of authenticity and anti-establishment values.

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  6. 1962 USA

    Levi's Type III (557XX) debuts

    The Type III (557XX) arrived with V-stitching, pointed flap pockets and a slim silhouette—the template for the modern "Trucker Jacket."

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  7. 1964 USA

    Wrangler adopts broken twill

    To eliminate leg twist, Wrangler adopted its signature broken twill—a shift from the regular twill used at the 13MWZ's 1947 launch.

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  8. 1965 Japan

    Japan's first domestically made jeans (Kojima, Okayama)

    Maruo Clothing (later Big John) in Kojima, Okayama produced Japan's first serious domestic jeans using imported fabric—beginning the legend of Kojima, Japan's denim capital.

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  9. 1967 USA

    Type III renumbered to 70505; exposed rivets removed

    When the 557XX became the 70505, exposed rivets disappeared. As Levi's put it, "the most significant change was the tiniest—the rivets were removed."

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  10. 1968 Japan

    The "Big John" brand is born; McQueen in "Bullitt"

    Maruo Clothing launched its own "Big John" brand, leading Japan's jeans industry; the same year, Steve McQueen embodied effortless denim cool in "Bullitt."

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Mass Production & Offshoring

1970s–1980s
  1. 1971 USA

    Levi's shifts from "Big E" to lowercase "e"

    The red-tab logo changed from "LEVI'S" to lowercase-e "LeVI'S." Pre-1971 "Big E" pieces still command premium vintage value to this day.

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  2. 1973 Japan

    Kurabo develops Japan's first domestic denim fabric, "KD-8"

    Kurashiki Boseki (Kurabo) developed the domestic denim fabric "KD-8," supplying Big John—the start of a self-sufficient Japanese denim industry from fabric to finishing.

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Japanese Repro Revolution

Late 1970s–1990s
  1. 1979 Japan

    Studio D'Artisan founded (vanguard of the Osaka Five)

    Shigeharu Tagaki founded Studio D'Artisan (originally "Studio I.S.A." in Onomichi, Hiroshima), establishing the philosophy of recreating vintage on vintage shuttle looms and igniting the Osaka Five repro revolution.

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  2. 1984 USA

    Springsteen's "Born in the U.S.A."

    The globally huge album—its cover showing faded 501s—re-cemented the bond between working-class America and denim.

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  3. 1988 Japan

    Denime founded

    Yoshiyuki Hayashi launched Denime, chasing the feel of vintage Levi's such as the 66 model—one of the celebrated Osaka Five.

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  4. 1991 Japan

    Evisu founded

    Hidehiko Yamane founded Evisu, whose hand-painted seagull on the back pocket and obsessively woven shuttle-loom denim took Japanese repro to the world.

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  5. 1992 Japan

    Fullcount founded (pioneer of Zimbabwe cotton)

    Mikiharu Tsujita left EVIS (later Evisu) to found Fullcount, pioneering the use of soft, long-staple Zimbabwe cotton in repro denim and raising the bar for hand feel among the Osaka Five.

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  6. 1995 Japan

    Warehouse founded

    Founded by the Shiotani brothers, Warehouse rounded out the Osaka Five with a near-scientific dedication to studying and recreating vintage fading.

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  7. 1997 Japan

    Rise of the second-generation repro brands

    A second wave—Samurai Jeans, Pure Blue Japan and others—followed the Osaka Five, competing on heavy weights and distinctive fades and diversifying the market.

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The Modern Era

2000s–
  1. 2006 Japan

    Japan Blue / Momotaro Jeans founded

    Japan Blue, devoted to indigo and in-house weaving, launched Momotaro Jeans—a modern standard-bearer pushing Kojima denim onto the global stage.

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  2. 2017 USA

    Cone Mills White Oak plant closes

    The White Oak plant—weaving authentic 501 selvedge for over a century—closed, ending an era of American selvedge and underscoring the value of Japan's surviving shuttle looms.

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