{"id":145107,"date":"2019-10-23T00:01:25","date_gmt":"2019-10-23T06:01:25","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.heddels.com\/?p=145107"},"modified":"2019-10-18T15:34:55","modified_gmt":"2019-10-18T21:34:55","slug":"behind-bleu-de-travail-denims-european-cousin","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.heddels.com\/2019\/10\/behind-bleu-de-travail-denims-european-cousin\/","title":{"rendered":"Behind Bleu de Travail – Denim’s European Cousin"},"content":{"rendered":"

For most of human history, people weren’t really thinking about workwear. At least not the people who control historical narratives. All kinds of major high-brow fashions came and went, many of which transcended oceans and borders long before the Internet, but working people wore their work-clothes until they didn’t need them anymore and moved on.<\/p>\n

Workwear was so ubiquitous as to be almost overlooked, a “forest for the trees” situation. And if working people were able to escape a life of toil, they often discarded the trappings of their former lives and tossed on fancier threads. Famously, Elvis Presley, who’d come from a working class background, hated having to wear denim once he’d made it – he associated the fabric too closely with his hardscrabble youth.<\/p>

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