Fashion | Denim's Things |#23 Journey to the Tops - The Levi's 501 Jeans
Journey to the Tops - The Levi’s 501 Jeans
The Levi’s 501 Jeans Timelines
1853
- Levi Strauss cames to San Francisco and open a wholesale dry
- Selling Clothing, blankets, Handkerchiefs
- Small general stores in American West
1872
- Jacob Davis a tailor, writes a letter to Levi Strauss and told levi that’s he has invented rivet to the pocket on corners men’s pants. He suggest take out a patent on the process and levi agrees.
1873
- Levi Strauss and Jacob Davis granted a patent on the process of riveting pants. The invention of the blue jeans.
- The first product called “waist overalls”, with one back pocket arcuate stitching design, a watch pocket, a cinch, suspender button and a rivet in the crotch.
- The cinch and suspender buttons were standard on men’s pants.
- The pants are made of 9 oz. XX blue denim, which comes from the Amoskeag Mill in Manchester, New Hampshire.
1886
- The Two Horse brand leather patch is first used on the waist overalls. Its purpose was to demonstrate the strength of the pants and reinforce our status as the originator of patent riveted clothing.
1890
- The rivet patent goes into the public domain, so that Levi Strauss & Co. is not longer the exclusive manufacturer of riveted clothing.
- Lot’s of number are first assigned to the product and the number 501 was used to design the famous copper riveted waist overalls.
- The 201 jean was made, which was a less expensive version of the pants, as well as other products using other three-digit numbers.
1901
- The pants – now just called “overalls”
- now have two back pockets. added this additional pocket due to consumer requests or changes in men’s fashions at the time.
1902
- Levi Strauss dies at the age of 73. His nephews take over the business; their descendants still run the company today.
1906
- The San Francisco earthquake and fire destroys the headquarters and factories of Levi Strauss & Co. A new factory is built at 250 Valencia Street in San Francisco and opens in November.
1910
- Sometime during this decade the jeans are sewn with a felled inseam. Prior to this time the inseam was “mock” felled.
1915
- The overalls win a “Highest Award” at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco.
- LS&CO. begins to buy denim from Cone Mills in Greebsboro, North Carolina.
1922
- Belt loops are added to the overalls, but the suspender buttons are still retained. The cinch is also still used on the pants, but some men cut if off in order to wear the overalls with a belt. Again, the addition of belt loops was in response to changes in men’s fashions and understanding of what consumers wanted.
- LS&CO. now buys its denim exclusively from Cone Mills.
1927
- Cone Mills develops the 10 oz. red selvage denim exclusively for the 501® jeans. The denim is woven in 29” wide looms.
1936
- The red Tab is first placed onto the right back pocket of the overalls. The word “Levi’s is stitched in white in all capital letters on one side only.
- The Tab is created to differentiate Levi’s® overalls from the many competitors in the marketplace who were using dark denim and an Arcuate stitch. We had not yet trademarked the Arcuate so other companies were using it in direct imitation of us.
1937
- The back pockets on the overalls are sewn so that they cover the rivets. This is in response to consumers who complained that the rivets scratched furniture and saddles.
- The suspender buttons are removed from the overalls. Consumers are given snap-on buttons in case they still want to wear suspenders.
War II
- set by the War Production Board for the conservation of raw materials.
- The crotch rivet, watch pocket rivets and back cinch are removed to save fabric and metal. The Arcuate stitching design is removed as the thread is decorative only and not vital to the usefulness of the garment. In order to keep the design on the pants, LS&CO. sewing machine operators paint it on each pair.
1943
- The Arcuate stitching design is registered as a trademark.
1947
- The post-war version of the 501® jeans starts coming off the production line. The cinch is gone forever, the rivets are put back on the watch pocket and the Arcuate is now stitched with a double-needle machine which gives it the “diamond” shape at the point where the two lines of stitching meet. This creates the uniform look of the Arcuate, which is in contrast to previous years, when the single needle application gave each Arcuate design a unique appearance, depending on the skill of the operator.
Early 1950s
- The word LEVI’S is now stitched on both sides of the red Tab.
1954
- A zippered version of the overalls is introduced and named 501Z. This was introduced as we had begun selling our products on the East Coast of the United States and many people were unfamiliar with the button fly.
Late 1950s
- The leather patch is replaced by a Two Horse patch made of heavy-duty card stock, known as the “leather like.” This is due to the fact that the company was selling products nationally, and it was becoming more expensive to use real leather. Also, the newer automatic washing machines were very hard on the real thing.
1960
- The word “overalls” is replaced by the word “jeans” in advertising and on packaging. We had made other products in the past which we called “jeans” (specifically, denim pants for boys in the 1930s) but our top of the line “overalls” – 501® jeans – did not get this name until teenagers began calling the product “jeans” in the 1950s. No one really knows why the word became associated with the men’s overalls, but teenagers adopted the phrase and it became the term used by all manufacturers.
1961
- Pre-shrunk Levi’s jeans are introduced.
1964
- The jeans become part of the permanent collections of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.
1966
- The first television commercial for Levi’s jeans is aired.
- The rivets are removed from the back pockets and replaced with bar tacking. This is due to the fact that the strong rivets eventually wore through the denim, exposing them and causing the problems that led to their being covered back in 1937: scratching furniture.
1971
- The word “Levi’s on the red Tab device is now stitched in white with a capital “L” only; the “E” looks like it changed, leading to the vintage clothing concept of “Big E” and “little e.” This was done to conform to the company’s new housemark – the “batwing” – which was adopted in 1967 and in which the word “Levi’s” is meant to be the proper name of our founder, Levi Strauss.
1981
- 501 jeans for women are introduced, with the airing of the famous “Travis” television commercial.
1983
- Cone Mills begins to introduce XXX denim through the use of 60” wide looms.
1984
- The renowned “501 Blues” television advertising campaign is launched at the summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles.
1985
- LS&CO. wins the Governor’s Committee Media/Advertising Award from the New York State Office of Advocates for the Disabled, for its positive portrayals of disabled people in the “501 Blues” television ads.
1986
- The first in a series of innovative television commercials for the 501 jeans airs in Europe. These commercials feature classic American rock music mixed with nostalgia and romance.
1992
- Due to the interest in “vintage” Levi’s jeans on the part of consumers worldwide, LS&CO. introduces the “Capital E” jean in the United States. This also follows on the success of the vintage model created earlier by Levi Strauss Japan.
1993
- Levi Strauss & Co. sponsors the “Send Them Home Search,” a contest to find the oldest pair of Levi’s jeans in the United States. The winning pair dates to the late 1920s.
1996
- Building on the success of the Capital E product, a new series of vintage reproductions - called the Levi’s Vintage Clothing line - is introduced in stores worldwide.
1997
- LS&CO. buys a pair of c1890 501® jeans for $25,000.
1998
- The Levi’s 501 jeans celebrate 125 years of originality.
2003
- LS&CO. celebrates the 130th anniversary of the invention of the blue jean.
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