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Fade of the Day – IndigoSkin V-Series 3 (1 Year, 1 Wash, 2 Soaks)

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The wide variety of fade submissions we have been seeing lately is not only a testament to a healthy and growing raw denim scene, but also makes for some interesting and unique fades that don’t come around every day. Today’s Fade of the Day is a great example of that, with this pair of year old IndigoSkin V-Series 3‘s worn by Saranyu Tubya from Thailand.

We really love seeing crazy contrast in worn denim, and the separation from the top to bottom half is crazy on this pair. The stacks are almost perfectly symmetrical and form a nice diamond pattern when laid out for photos. And finally, how could we not point out the vivid honeycomb action seen here? There’s not much to say other than good looks Saranya, and keep ’em going.

IndigoSkin V-Series 3

  • Fabric: 100% cotton selvedge denim
  • Weight: 18oz.
  • Fit: Straight
  • Unique Features:
    • Vintage inspired fit
    • Handwoven indigo dyed pocket bags
  • Learn more on the IndigoSkin Facebook

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Noble Denim x Bulleit Bourbon Barrel Aged Jeans Revisited

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Noble Denim x Bulleit Bourbon Barrel Aged Jeans Revisited

Last May, Chris Sutton of Noble Denim sent an e-mail that was no longer expected. The collaborative jean that Noble created with Bulleit Bourbon were nearly ready. It’d been six months since the initial project invitation, four months since I had started to check the mail box for them and two months since I had given up. But that one day in May, I decided to check in with Noble as a last ditch effort. Sutton promptly responded, despite being on the road and having automated his e-mail response.

“Since you joined the project late, we decided to let your jeans age a bit longer,” Sutton wrote. “But then life got crazy and we left them aging. You are going to have a six-month aged pair of Barrel Aged Jeans and I think they are going to be awesome and worth the wait, I’m curious what they will be like.”

Two months later, I drove 100 miles down to Noble’s headquarters. Noble calls Cincinnati’s Over-The-Rhine district home, a historically working-class neighborhood that has, in parts, become gentrified. It still has a grit to it, however, and still stands separate from the rest of downtown. It was there I met Sam, a tall, skinny dude who bounded down the stairs to greet me.

The Noble Denim Lounge

The Noble Lounge

He led me upstairs to where Noble’s original tailor, Chris Sutton, was finishing up a couple of tasks. Sutton shares a similar aesthetic to Wessner, and to Noble denim as a whole. He’s dressed in a straightforward and clean aesthetic, with a sixties-era cut grey t-shirt and a pair of Noble Earnest Slims. Sutton is a small guy, lithe enough that he had to take in his pair of Earnest Slims a little extra to create the fit he desired. He greeted me as well and made small talk, asking about the Orgueils I was currently wearing.

Sutton’s first pair of faded jeans were displayed on the wall, as was an oversized novelty check in a corner. The check’s a measure of pride, particularly for Sutton, as it was an award grant given for winning a small Cincinnati business competition. While Sutton is a full-time Cincinnati-an, Wessner lives in New York, where his other business is the El Rey Café.

Noble Denim Rack

The most telling part of their office is a rack of stiff, dry denim hanging neatly in a line behind the sewing machines. These jeans represent Noble’s history and aspirations. Sutton’s first jean ever made were on the right. Under scrutiny, the inside of these jeans are, at times, a mess of thread and without a doubt a learning experience. More interesting is the leather patch, which reveals that Sutton initially was going to call his denim company Billy Kidzilla (Noble was probably a wise name change).

In the middle, there are more prototypes – some worn, others raw – and the first jeans done by his collaborative factory in Tennessee.

The brief tour finished, the Noble duo returned to the lounge are and brought out an apt choice of drink for the day: a bottle of Bulleit’s whiskey. We settled in, and got right down to it; how did a young denim brand end up teaming with part of an international liquor conglomerate?

The Bulleit Bourbon Collaboration

Co-Creative Director Sam Wessner

Co-Creative Director Sam Wessner

Denim brands – at least the ones discussed around here –  are unafraid to have fun and get creative. Brands such as Ooe Yofukuten take advantage of their followings to do world tours. Countless others have enjoyed doing collaborations with stores or fellow labels. Noble Denim, for most of its existence, has been making original, small batch collections to go along with their standard lines. Before demand became too much, custom tailoring was a big deal as well.

But using whiskey, that was an old idea of John Willis, a friend, and photographer that has worked with Sutton and Wessner over time. It was never put into production but ruminated for years.

Since Sutton left his previous desk job and committed to denim, Noble has been on a slow and steady trend upward, focusing on clean products and smart marketing. Wessner was introduced to Sutton early on and the pair quickly hit it off. The New York Wessner connections allowed a brand based in Cincinnati to get additional exposure in a larger locale.

Noble Denim HQ

Meanwhile, Tom Bulleit’s original bourbon recipe began in 1830 but was revitalized in the late 90s, after being purchased by several larger liquor distributors. Along the road, Bulleit kept growing in reputation and winning awards until it became known as a reputable bourbon. Today, Bulleit is primarily distilled at the Kirin Brewing Company’s Four Roses distillery in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky. In such a competitive business world, its team of marketers is likely always on the prowl for new ideas to reach and appeal to their target audience.

Noble’s proximity to Kentucky put them just a short distance from Bulleit. Noble caught someone at Bulleit’s eye, and they began viewing lookbooks of Noble and out of the blue Wessner and Sutton received a pleasantly unexpected phone call. Bulleit wanted to do something with Noble and asked if they had any ideas. It didn’t take long for the whiskey jeans idea to be proposed, discussed, and embraced. Now the question became how to make it work.

Hearing Sutton and Wessner tell it, this process was more free and fun than it should have been. Noble was basically able to do whatever they wanted. They were invited down the Bulleit HQ to explore and meet up with the creative department. The company sent them way too much whiskey to drink. Sutton said that the only thing Bulleit insisted upon was the type of Bulleit that would be displayed in promotional material. And when it was all over, a winter holiday party was thrown in New York City.

Noble Denim

Of course, such freedom meant a lot of groundwork required on Noble’s end. Making the jeans would be the easy part. Hours upon hours were put in on planning and research. Would whiskey work as an effective dyestuff? Sutton sought help from a natural dyeing expert named Kathy in the Pacific Northwest. She educated Sutton on the processes and led him to use black walnuts and soda ash. Black walnuts are a particularly strong natural dye, and would enhance the whiskey coloring on the denim. Meanwhile, the soda ash changes the pH of the cotton and the dyestuffs to create a reaction that holds fast. Using Bulleit barrels still wet with whiskey, this combination, plus water, would welcome the denim in a sludgy embrace.

In the fall of 2014, the jeans were finally ready to dip. The barrels were installed in the backwoods of Willis’ parent’s house in Kentucky, an appropriate measure to keep the project Kentucky-bred. The plan was to let the 83 pairs of denim brew for a few months and then pull, clean them up and then distribute. But distribute to who?

The jeans would be given away. A massive number of work hours required a price tag near $400 to turn a profit, and it didn’t seem appropriate for a project made in a fun spirit of seeing what would happen. So a list was created, and people checked in.

In the Kentucky woods, denim was brewing. All that was left to do was wait. What would happen to the jeans? Would they twist, shrink or fall apart? Would some adventurous woodsmen stumble upon the lonely whiskey barrels and help themselves? Would the overdye do anything? All I knew, listening to Sutton and Wessner finish their story, was that the results were sitting in a bag the next room over.

Noble Denim x Bulleit Bourbon Barrel Aged Jeans

Noble Denim x Bulleit Bourbon Barrel Aged Jeans

Nearly two years ago, Noble Denim teamed up with Kentucky’s own Bulleit Bourbon to collaborate on a pair of barrel-aged jeans. Heddels was lucky enough to get a pair in July of 2015, after six months in oak and a single wash. They’ve been on steady rotation ever since with two other pairs of denim.

The first necessary action upon first handling these jeans was to smell them. How many times are you actually eager to smell a pair of raw denim? Unlike the standard aroma of rank sweat people cringe from, these were slightly sweet and had the distinct oaky-smoke flavor that everyone loves from their favorite bottle of whiskey. It was a pleasant surprise that I had hoped for but not expected.

Noble x Bulleit denim with provide sack and piece of oak barrel

Noble x Bulleit denim with provided sack and piece of oak barrel

Due to the unique nature of this small batch project, Noble didn’t hold back with the presentation. The jeans arrived in a white drawstring sack (related reading: “How to Make a Cinch Tote Bag) prominently emblazoned with a logo designed by Dallas artist Kyle Steed. The bag also contained an engraved piece of the barrel the jeans were aged in with the batch number and the jean size. Mine matched the barrel design that was on the sack itself, but other designs include one with a silhouette of a horse head and another within a can. It’s a real cool novelty which will provide a keepsake beyond the life of the jeans themselves.

The jeans themselves were packaged inside out for good reason. The twisted state that they sat in the barrel left them with a beautiful marbled pattern. Colors ranged from a deep brown to a golden honey color. The selvedge line looked like it was from jeans made 100 years ago, not two years ago. The same with the pocket bags, which are also decked out with details about the jean and fun little easter eggs, such as “Curiosity killed the cat, buddy,” printed on the hidden side of the pocket.

Noble Denim x Bulleit Bourbon Barrel Aged Jeans fabric

The exterior of the jeans was a wrinkled, awesome mess. It was clear that these had been bundled up in liquid for a while, and I loved it. It’s a great, unforced distressed quality that made me want to beat the shit out of them with pride. The denim was as dark as any I’ve seen with a white weft. There was light evidence of sticky-looking stains and a golden brown look from the overdye. But when the sun hit them at the right angle, a beautiful golden brown emanated through. The one disappointing factor was that the denim itself was a sanforized lightweight batch of Cone Mills. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, but an unsanforized, neppy, slubby denim would have reflected the gnarly-ness of these jeans much better.

Adding to the look was a patina on all the hardware and thread. Noble typically uses yellow and orange threads from American & Efird, and they were perfect for accenting the overdye. The only alternative that may have been interesting would be a white based thread, which would have more explicitly represented the whiskey color. This is noted only because the look of the selvedge line and peek-a-boo selvedge on the coin pocket has such a great antique quality. On the hardware, the raw copper rivets had a sludgy patina, while the black copper donut buttons had rusting on the interior.

Noble x Bulleit (left) sitting next to a prototype with Nihon Menpu organic selvedge

Noble x Bulleit (left) sitting next to a prototype with Nihon Menpu organic selvedge

It should be noted that aspects of critiquing Noble’s fit and construction can no longer be considered up to date because earlier this year Noble made some notable updates. The denim is now a 14 Oz. natural indigo organic selvedge from Nihon Menpu. Hidden rivets and more elegant stitching were added to the back pockets, a hanging loop added to the waistband and the pocket bags are now a herringbone twill.

What was carried over from their former details are lined pockets, a continuous single needle stitch waistband, and the “N” stitched in at the base of the outer pocket bag stitch. In conjunction with the update, the price has risen as well to $285. But when you consider the new denim and combine it with the extra time invested in each pair, it is easy to see where the money went.

With all of that out of the way, Noble made a fine pair of jeans. There’s a high stitch-per-inch, clean straight lines, and simple design. Belt loops are tucked into the waistband; the pockets are fully lined…everything feels very solid. The leather patch is a real highlight. Kyle Steed’s design is fun; well reflective of the Bulleit’s bottle while clearly integrating the text in creative angles.

Noble Denim

There are a few gripes. One is a quality control error on a belt loop was a little off. Instead of being straight up and down, it’s angled to the right and exposes the underside of the loop. It’s especially jarring because it is one of a pair bookending the rear rise. The left one is nice and even, making the error more noticeable. The next thing is the rivets on the coin pocket are just too long. It’s barely noticeable when looking at them, but when you reach into the pocket to grab whatever is in there, the rivets dig into your hand uncomfortably. Lastly, speaking of the pockets, they’re just not deep enough for my liking. For anyone owning a phone with a screen over five inches, there’s a chance that it could dig into your waist when prominently bending. This issue is purely subjective, but adding another half inch of depth to the pocket would have been nice.

Noble offers two main fits, the Earnest Slim and the Truman. The Earnest Slim is – as described in its title – the slimmer of the two, with a fitted top block and a taper below the knee. The Truman is closer to the classic straight cut, with more breathing room up top and a lighter taper down below. For this project, I was provided with the Truman, which Noble states is their best seller. After wearing them, it’s for good reason. The jean is a great cut and fit. It allows for a good range of movement while looking timeless. It’s unlikely that Noble will ever need to change this pattern as long as they’re in business. The biggest thing that stood out was the rise. It’s a little higher than I’m used to, but it’s not a high waist jean by any means. It’s a comfortable seat, and I find the pants sliding down more infrequently than other denim in the collection, with or without a belt.

Noble Denim Selvedge

Noble has no semblance of vanity sizing. In fact, they can be a half inch smaller in the waist than the tag. Noble sent out a 37, but a 36 would have been better due to the stretch that the denim has. When it came time for the first wash, it shocked me how much they shrank back up. It will likely encourage me to wash them more frequently to keep the fit where I like it. I wouldn’t size down, though, for those who are curious. Go with the Earnest fit instead and you’ll be happy.

The first couple of months in these were interesting. The first day a good sweat got going, I swear it must have smelled like I had just gotten off of a bender. The denim was also a little sticky at first, clinging particularly around the knee. There was a slight bit of chafing as well. But soon they felt like any other jean. The wrinkles and creasing from the whiskey process gradually subsided and is now only subtly noticeable in parts below the knee. It remains to be seen whether they will show up more prominently once the jeans have faded. The cuffs had originally refused to roll flat, which worked well with their funkiness. Over time, they settled as well and now sit much flatter.

Noble Denim x Bulleit Bourbon Barrel Aged Jeans Back and Front

Unfortunately, the stubbornness of the denim combined with a relatively light wear intensity has meant that fades are slow to show. The signs are there for promising stuff: great roping is starting, and some electric blue is popping out. It’s a more agonizing wait than normal, and it is going to be interesting to see how the contrast comes out. Will the brown marbling display where the indigo fades? My guess is not exactly. After giving the jeans their first wash and inspecting them inside out once again, it seems like the whiskey is fading much akin to the indigo.

The contrast from before is a little subdued and has rubbed out completely on the inner name tag. Considering that this was as much of an experiment as anything, the overdye process could probably have been refined a little more, with perhaps a second dip or a stronger amount of fixative. Then again, if we look at overdye treatments, like those done by Iron Heart, maybe it would be wrong to expect more. There is still a strong whiskey undertone, though, and combined with how dark the indigo looks, these could have quite the contrast. These aren’t going to be pulled out of rotation anytime soon, so another, briefer update is likely for the future.

Noble Denim x Bulleit Bourbon Barrel Aged Jeans Back and Front Interior

Noble Denim is a company still in its earlier stages. It is only entering its fourth official year. Despite coming at a time where everyone and their mother was starting a selvedge denim company, Chris Sutton, and Sam Wessner have managed to keep their company on an impressively upward trajectory. In addition to the successful collaboration with Bulleit, the duo started Victor Athletics and opened their first brick and mortar store in downtown Cincinnati. And now they’ve taken another step forward with the revision of their denim construction. The bourbon denim may never return, but it’s exciting to see what comes next.

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Fade Friday – Red Cloud R400H (1 Year, 2 Months, Unknown Washes)

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Slub-a-dub-dub, have we got some slubby jeans for you in today’s fade. This pair of Red Cloud R400H jeans comes to us from Ian Greer of Washington State, and it’s a streaky work of art with some nice patchwork to boot. After 14 months, and an unknown number of washes, they’ve developed some knee holes, but were repaired with selvedge denim, and some Japanese wave-pattern fabric for a nice wabi-sabi effect, if you will.

The whiskers have achieved a solid contrast, and the honeycombs are very pronounced and nice. There’s even tight roping on the hem that’s starting to tear in a satisfying way. However, the real story of these jeans is the slub, and that broken twill, an almost clashing combination of patterns. Red Cloud‘s denim on these is the real deal and the wear Ian put into them has let this outstanding denim shine.

Red Cloud R400H

  • Fabric: Unsanforized broken twill cotton/hemp selvedge denim
  • Weight: 17 oz.
  • Fit: Slim Straight
  • Unique Features:
    • Goatskin leather patch
    • Laurel leaf buttons
    • Made in China
  • Available for $219 at AB Fits

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Naked & Famous Scratch-n-Sniff Evergreen Jeans

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Naked & Famous has many claims to fame and believe it or not, scratch-n-sniff denim is one of them. Previous smellgoods have included raspberry and mint, and the latest to take the stage is Canadian pine; a collaboration with Canook, a retailer in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

The fabric itself is a 12.65 oz. right hand twill rope dyed Japanese denim, in their Weird Guy fit: a medium rise slim fit with a taper from the knee down. Rumor has it the smell will last for up to five washes. We can neither confirm nor deny whether lining your dresser with pine boughs will help preserve the effect.

Available from Canook for $168CAD (~$128USD).

 

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Lee 101 Upgrades Their 191-LB Zip Jacket

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#FlashbackFriday: Lee 101 reinvents its iconic 191-LB Zip Jacket for today’s denimheads. Premium dry selvedge denim ties together the classic red quilted sateen lining, tobacco corduroy collar, and tarnished brass zippers.

Lee’s also freshened things up with a trim contemporary silhouette, and a combination of color-matched and contrasting stitching on the seams and pockets.

Available only in the UK and from Lee’s UK site, for £170.00 in S – XXL. Take note, XL is already sold out, so move fast if this is your dream jacket.

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Pure Blue Japan 14oz. Deep Indigo Selvedge Slim Fit Work Pants

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Pure Blue Japan are out pushing the boundaries of old and new, and have mashed the two perfectly with their latest release. The 14oz. Deep Indigo Selvedge Slim Fit Work Pants are made using PBJ original Japanese slub selvedge denim in a very deep indigo that will surely make for some righteous fades over time.

They combine certain aspects of classic work pants such as the buckle back with leather-backed rivets, hammer loop, and trouser hem with a more modern silhouette. They have been washed once so there’s no shrinkage left, and so you don’t crock your shoes (as much) blue.

Available for $275 at Blue In Green.

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Self Edge x Strike Gold Wavy Standard Short Slub Selvedge Jeans

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After carrying the brand for years, the guys at Self Edge decided it was time to strike up a collaborative pair of jeans with Japan’s own Strike Gold. The results are something we have never seen before, and goes by the name of Wavy Standard Short Slub Selvedge Jeans.

The two teams spent a good amount of effort focusing on the development of a unique and exclusive denim for the project, and ended up with an unsanforized 17oz. super short slub cotton weft denim that rivals even the renowned Sugar Cane Okinawa. To produce a fabric like this, the yarns are spun at a much slower pace that gives the denim an extremely uneven texture while retaining the strength and body that a 17oz. jean should have.

As momentous as these jeans are, they are completed with final touches such as a gold sparkle selvedge ID paired with a gold foil stamped deerskin leather patch. Stealth arcs will show through as the fades begin, and cotton poly-core thread construction adds strength while retaining a traditional look.

Available in two fits for $345 at Self Edge.

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Fade Friday – Hanzo The Raid 17oz. Big Slub (11 Months, 2 Washes, 1 Soak)

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Fade Friday - Hanzo The Raid 17oz. Big Slub (11 Months, 2 Washes, 1 Soak)

What happens when you mix 11 months of hard work days, motorcycle riding, and occasionally getting stuck in a rain storm? You get today’s Fade Friday with these Hanzo The Raid 17oz. Big Slub‘s sent to us by Semmi Andrianto from Jakarta, Indonesia. Their name is no joke, as can be witnessed with just how intensely that slubby texture has shown through in these fades, making for a really unique and noteworthy overall appearance.

Maybe you think you know about honeycombs and stacks, but if you don’t, now would be a good time to break out the notepad and pen and learn a thing or two. These are more than textbook, in fact they are straight up trophy worthy. With one knee repair due to an accident on the aforementioned motorcycle, and what looks to be a crotch blow out to fix next, these guys have earned their glory in under a year.

Details

  • Name: Hanzo The Raid 17oz. Big Slub 
  • Fabric: 100% cotton long staple Zimbabwean selvedge denim
  • Weight: 17 oz.
  • Fit: Slim straight
  • Unique Features:
    • Sewn using 4 colors of thread and the 3D look stitching technique
    • Ecru Handwoven Twill pocket lining
    • 100% handmade by one person
  • Available for $160 at Hanzo Clothing.

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Fade of the Day – Raleigh Martin Original Selvedge Raw (9 Months, 1 Wash)

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Fade of the Day - Raleigh Original Selvedge Raw (9 Months, 1 Wash) Knee

Today’s Fade of the Day is brought to you by reader Thomas Dant from Indianapolis and his 9 month old Raleigh Martin Original Selvedge Raw jeans. Dark, contrasty, and flat out mean-looking, these guys have been worn pretty steadily for general wear and working on/riding motorcycles, as well as hiking the desert of Joshua Tree.

Well-rounded wear means well-developed fades, and even at only 9 months we are seeing some strong whiskering taking form in the front with some honeycombs to match in the back. And if you’re looking for a place to shop in Indiana, check out Thomas’ store, James Dant, which you can see over on Instagram.

Details

  • Name: Raleigh Martin Original Selvedge Raw
  • Fabric: 100% cotton Cone Mills White Oak selvedge denim
  • Weight: 12.5oz.
  • Fit: Slim taper
  • Unique Features:
    • Original, tinted-weft selvage made exclusively for Raleigh
    • Half lined back pockets
    • Hand signed in front pocket
  • Available for $285 at Raleigh

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Oni Denim 16oz. Green Cast Kihannen Relax Tapered

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Green cast denim doesn’t get as much love as it ought, so the latest from Oni Denim is here. If you haven’t tried your legs at a pair, you can get going with their Green Cast Kihannen Relax Tapered jean all summer ’16.

There’s so much vertical slub on this denim you can expect some super streaky fades later on. The silhouette is comfortably tailored with a relaxed fit in the top block and a tapered leg so you don’t look like a slob in your slubs. And as per usual, Oni details like hidden rivets, roped belt loops, and continuously stitched leather patch are all here.

Available for $178 at Denimio.

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Tenue de Nîmes “Dead Stock Blue” 14.75oz. Pablo Denim

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The latest release from Amsterdam-based Tenue de Nîmes in-house denim label is the Pablo Dead Stock Blue. It is a new iteration of the brand’s Pablo Memphis II, released in August 2015 .

The traditional styling includes a slightly relaxed fit up top, with a straight slim leg. Consistent with their previous releases, the Pablo Dead Stock Blue features all cotton selvedge, tucked belt loops and tonal stitching. It’s billed as “a classic ‘Americana’ jean” that “serves a traditional denim aficionado” (no small ambitions there).

Manufactured in a facility near Venice, Italy, the jeans are constructed from 14.75oz. dead stock from the Rampuya mill in Kojima, Japan. This is just a bit heavier than the first Pablos, which weighed in at 14.5oz. They also feature specially designed brass buttons and rivets made in partnership with another Italian factory.

No word yet on whether this is a limited release, you can find out more on Tenue’s website.

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JWJ Brand El Patron Hemp Blend Denim Jacket

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When it comes to classically inspired denim workwear, you probably aren’t thinking too much of products coming out of Spain. In case you missed our coverage of Denim by PV a couple years back, we’re here to remind you that companies like JWJ Brand are changing that notion.

Their new El Patron Hemp Blend Denim Jacket is a blast from the past. Pulling inspiration from the early Levi’s 1878 Jacket, it’s detailed with a triple pleated front and flat felled seams throughout. The fabric itself is an unsanforized hank-dyed 15.5oz. custom 65% cotton 35% hemp fibers denim from Nihon Menpu with a solid green selvedge ID and new old stock (NOS) 50% linen 50% cotton fabric behind the collar. With natural veg tan leather washers under rivets and buttons, and YKK solid copper buttons, you can’t ask for much more on a jacket.

Available for 322.31€ (about $360) at JWJ Brand.

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Pure Blue Japan AI-13-TSM Hand-Dyed Natural Indigo Jeans

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Pure Blue Japan AI-13-TSM Hand-Dyed Natural Indigo Jeans front and back fit

Pure Blue Japan has just released a hand-dyed indigo jean that leaves slightly more cash in your wallet than previous iterations we’ve seen. A cool $355 gets your legs in a pair of pants that’s dyed by hand with natural indigo harvested from Japan’s Tokushima prefecture (an historic source of indigo with government-certified expertise required to administer it to denim).

Constructed with 13.5oz. selvedge denim, the jeans also feature a deerskin leather patch, herringbone twill pocket lining, a button fly, and 100% cotton stitches. Plus, of course, the usual delights of hand-dyed denim: a visibly variable slub texture, and radiant, long-lasting indigo color.

Available for $355 at Okayama Denim.

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Kingpins A/W 2017 New York Fabric Tradeshow Coverage

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If you think that our ready-to-wear tradeshow coverage is way too insider-y for a consumer focussed publication, get ready to go one level deeper. Grab a paddle we’re headed upstream! In a subculture where the material something is made out of regularly trumps the garment itself, we find it helpful to highlight new developments in the textile industry that you’ll eventually see (or we hope you’ll see) on your favorite brands.

You may have noticed that the ready-to-wear tradeshows present two seasons ahead of what’s in stores, well the fabric producers go a full three to four seasons in advance so the brands have a chance to pick out their fabrics.

The best venues for the latest and greatest in denim and specialty textiles are the Kingpins and Denim by PV tradeshows, and you’ll see all the major players in attendance at both. The most recent showing of Kingpins happened a couple weeks ago in New York, and Nick and I were on the floor.

The word on everyone’s lips was “performance”. It seemed as though having a high-quality fabric wasn’t enough this season, your denim also had to “do something”: resist abrasion, wick away moisture, repel mosquitoes, what have you. Denim manufacturers must be feeling the heat from the athleisure/yoga pants market, as many of the offerings we saw were about making denim do so much more than fade.

The post Kingpins A/W 2017 New York Fabric Tradeshow Coverage appeared first on Heddels.com.

A.P.C. Women’s Raw Denim Jacket, Jeans, and Skirts

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Masters of minimalism, and arguably creators of the gateway pair of raw denim jeans, A.P.C., recently dropped some understated newness. But it’s their women’s raw denim collection that’s caught our eye.

The collection comprises of three skirts, three jeans, and one classic Type III jacket. Clean, raw, there’s sure to be something that’ll get the wheels turning for women who might be hesitant about the whole stiff jean thing. All of the pieces use Japanese raw denim and, save for one of the skirts, include a bit of stretch.

They may have opened the gateway for many men. We hope they can do it for the ladies too.

Available at $110-$260 at A.P.C.

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Fade of the Day – Howies Kuroki (18 Months, 4 Washes)

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In my opinion, one of the coolest features you’ll find on any pair of worn in jeans is the denim texture. It varies in so many ways depending on where it came from, how it was made, and of course, how it looks after it’s been worn. Today’s Fade of the Day was sent to us by Vincenzo Enormous from Windsor, UK, and shows his pair of Howies Kuroki jeans.

He has worn them for the majority of the last 18 months with no repairs and no complaints so far. Overall, the jeans have lightened up a few shades of indigo in this time, and that Kuroki Mills denim texture is really starting to shine through. And thanks to Vincenzo, we can all see how well they fit too!

Details

  • Name: Howies Kuroki
  • Fabric: 100% cotton Japanese denim from Kuroki Mills
  • Weight: 11.5oz.
  • Fit: Slim taper
  • Other Features:
    • Exposed front pocket rivets
    • Hidden pocket inside waistband
  • Similar model available for £125 (about $168) at Howies

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Fade of the Day – Lee Japan 101B Co (7 Years, 8 Months, 3 Washes)

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After nearly eight years of heavy wear, Sweden’s Bobo Fransen is the proud owner of some truly faded out Lee Japan 101B Co jeans. Surprisingly, the jeans have only been washed three times in that time period with almost no soaks recorded.

Designed to replicate waist overalls circa 1930, these jeans show some general wear and tear but have yet to require repairs despite the several dye loss. Though there isn’t much to see for honeycombs; the tight whiskers and heavy lap fades highlight the utilitarian nature of Bobo’s jeans. Simply put, these are a classic pair of workwear inspired jeans that have been put to the test.

Lee Japan 101B Co

  • Fabric: Unknown
  • Weight: Unknown
  • Fit: Straight
    • Other features:
    • Back strap
    • Crotch rivet
    • Donut button fly
    • Double felled seams
    • Made in Japan
  • Available at: Son of a Stag for £249.00

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Fade Friday – Iron Heart 21 oz. 555 Fit (2 Years, 4 Washes)

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It’s Friday folks, and that means it’s time to wind down and transition into weekend mode starting with some killer fades sent to us by Alex (and courtesy of London’s Rivet & Hide). He wore these Iron Heart 21oz. 555‘s for the last two years of adventuring, including working on his bike and jumping the occasional barbed wire fence.

The results are a prime example of the fading potential for any Iron Heart 21oz. denim–the deadly combo of high contrasting fades with notable areas such as the insane honeycombs happening here. I’ve said it before, but we tend to see the gnarliest combs on more slim fitting jeans (no surprise, when you think about it) and these are a great example being one of IH’s slimmer fits.

Alex says these are his go-to jeans when he’s out and about, and we hope to see how they look in another couple of years!

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Fade of the Day – Jean Shop Slim Fit (4 Years, 2 Months, 4 Washes)

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Got a blown out crotch? Today’s fade certainly does, but that doesn’t mean these jeans aren’t a doozy. This pair of Jean Shop Slim Fit jeans has been worn hard by Daniel F. of New York State for four years, from the date they were made on July 2, 2008, until the fall of 2012, when the crotch blew out for the third time.

Daniel wore them while drumming in his band and even spilled beer on them while on stage. After much rambling in these, they’ve been retired to take their place with the fallen jeans of denim Valhalla.

The post Fade of the Day – Jean Shop Slim Fit (4 Years, 2 Months, 4 Washes) appeared first on Heddels.com.

Fade of the Day – Somét 003 (6.5 Years, Unknown Washes, 7 Soaks)

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Six years old, my how they grow up so fast. This pair of Somét 003’s comes to us from Roger L. and it’s a multi-year project, to say the least. For the first year, he only wore them for “clean” activities, such as going to school or hanging out with friends (he used a pair of A.P.C.‘s for his “dirty” work as a barista). Since then, he’s worn these jeans often, kept them dry, and hung them up at the end of each day.

The whiskers and honeycombs look crispy, the knees have faded down well, and he’s even got some stacking at the hems. Needless to say, he’s achieved quite a lot over the last six years–due in part to Denim Therapy‘s masterful repairs–and still has wearable jeans to show for it.

Limited-time offer: if your denim is need of some much-needed TLC, you are in luck! Until September 5th, 2016, Heddels readers receive 20% off all of Denim Therapy‘s services (excluding shipping). Simply head over to their site and use the promo code, “Heddels16”.

The post Fade of the Day – Somét 003 (6.5 Years, Unknown Washes, 7 Soaks) appeared first on Heddels.com.

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