general

definition of jean

Known as the most representative garment of modernity, jean is undoubtedly one of the most popular and basic elements in the clothing of any person without distinction of socio-economic level, style, belief or ideology. Jeans can be found in such a variety of options and possibilities that it can perhaps be said that it is one of the most adapted, worked and designed garments of the 20th century.

If we want to understand what jeans are, then we must stop to comment on their history. Although jeans are traditionally thought to originate from North America, the truth is that the garment as such (a denim trousers) already existed for centuries in European countries such as France and Italy, although obviously with other characteristics. These pants were used for specific tasks, especially certain types of work tasks. It would not be until the late nineteenth century that this type of clothing would become more popular thanks to the marketing of the same carried out by the famous Levi Strauss, perhaps the name most associated with jean. These pants were sold to mine workers in the United States, but slowly they began to spread as everyday items due to their durability and strength.

Jeans are characterized by being blue pants, thick, rough to the touch and very resistant to any type of aggression that means for many other pants breakage or destruction. The jeans are made from cotton threads that are hardened and maintained under a long process and then spun together (combining white and blue threads). In some cases, the jeans are worked with hard and rough surfaces to gain that style that they possess.

Jeans are simply one of the most popular items in any dressing room these days. They are obtained in different sizes, lengths and sizes, as well as in different styles that have to do with the cut of the waist, with the way the jean falls on the feet, with the color, with how thick or stretchy the fabric, etc.

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