Different Parts of a Jeans Pant
Jeans pants are a huge fashion trend in the world nowadays. They accommodate a wide range of preferences and events with their endless styles, washes, and fits. Despite having its roots in tough workwear, jeans have developed into a classic and adaptable item of apparel that individuals of many ages and backgrounds wear. In this article, we discuss Different Parts of a Jeans Pant with pictures.
Basic jeans include the following major parts:
- Waist Band
- Belt Loop
- Fly Piece
- Watch Pocket
- Front Pocket
- Back Pocket
- Rivets
- Crotch Point
- Back Yoke
- Bottom Hem
- Back Rise
- Side Seam
- Inseam
- Zipper or Button
Different Parts of a Jeans Pant with Description
Waist Band: the belt that encircles the waist. It usually features belt loops and can be fastened with a zipper, hook-and-eye fastener, button, or snap closure.
Belt Loop: Jean pants come with belt loops attached to the waistband so the belt may fasten to it and secure the pants. Jeans pants have anything from five to seven loops.
Fly Piece: The fly is the portion of the pant that opens in the middle and is meant to conceal the button or zipper that is fastened there. Depending on the design, it could have a button or zipper fly.
Pocket: One of the key components of a jeans pant is a pocket. There are two pockets on the front and two more on the back of the jeans pants.
Watch Pocket: The little pocket, a holdover from the days when jeans were only worn for casual occasions, is still present in a wide variety of jeans today. It fits at the upper part of the right front pocket and is frequently used to hold small objects or cash.
Rivets: Small metal fasteners called rivets are used to reinforce cloth and stop tearing at stress spots like pocket corners. It is the true innovation by Strauss and Davis which made jeans pant popular almost 150 years ago.
Crotch Point: The part of jeans where the legs join is called the crotch. It is frequently strengthened for sturdiness.
Back Yoke: Yoke, which is connected to the waistband at the rear of a pair of jeans pants. The back yoke makes sure that our bodies are fitted closely in denim pants.
Bottom Hem: The bottom edge of the jeans, known as the hem, is where the cloth is finished and typically sewn or turned up.
Seam: The stitches that hold the pieces of cloth together are called seams. The rise (from the waistband to the crotch), sideseam (along the outer leg), and inseam (along the inner leg) are examples of common seam types.
- Inseam: The seam on the inside side of the leg that extends from the crotch to the bottom hem is called the inseam.
- Sideseam: The seam on the outside of the leg that extends from the waistband to the hem is known as the sideseam.
- Back Rise: The central back seam of a pair of jeans is called the back rise.
Zipper or Button: The front opening portion of the denim pants, which allows for the employment of both a button and chain system, is closed with a zipper. An alternative to employing a chain system zipper is to utilize two buttons.
- Author Information
- Mahzabin Mosharrof
- M.Sc in Textile Engineering, DUET (ongoing)
- Former Lab Technologist at Hohenstein BD
- Currently working as Instructor at NITER, Dhaka