IH-555-XHSib - 25oz Selvedge Denim Super Slim Jeans - Indigo/Black
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No plans as yet, but I guess we will at some point
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Really only took two wears for them to soften to the point of buttons going through holes easily and waist not feeling abrasions. I'm still mostly going to be in the 18 oz 555s for now, but looking forward to seeing where these go.
Paired em today with indigo forum tee, indigo kersey, double indigo duck and some Alden whiskey shell bluchers. Soooo much indigo.
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Nice.
Hope you didn’t sit on anything white!
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I heard the same thing… then I used man strength.
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hahahhaa man strength.
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I have the Pronto double indigo. Can anyone give me a logical reason to buy this, except for the fact I really want it?
I have two pairs of them and four other pairs in pronto but still this is different indigo outside, inside black and the first 25oz made in 555, what more can you asked for.
Iron hearts fans have asked to make this fews years back, the they never did, now it here.
So you really want it, get one before it to late. [emoji3516]
Thanks
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@peregrine Arc delete may upset peeps, but it looks good.
Arc don’t bother me cause I like them blue and yellow but I have a pair with yellow and blue in pronto on the same pair
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I had totally said I'd put these mostly on the back burner and keep wearing my 18 oz 555s almost daily until they're pretty completely broken in (they're at 16 months of almost exclusive daily wear now, so maybe another year?), but these quickly ended up in an even split with the 18 oz.
Unrelated… @Giles or @Alex, I'm curious for your thoughts on durability of these vs lighter jeans. The 18 is the most durable pair of jeans I've ever worn, and at least up to a certain point, more weight should certainly lead to more durability, though this is clearly not always the case, even within similar denims from the same brand. Do you expect more durability from these than from your lighter denim? I'd be curious if you could comment on what the most important factors for durability are. There are a number of ideas that get thrown around, and I've seen your thoughts on thread, etc, but I'm not sure I've ever seen your precise thoughts on the denim material itself. My 555s vs every other pair of selvedge denim I've put through the ringer (ranging from 21 oz Oni to 19 oz Samurai to 17 oz Pure Blue Japan to several others in lighter weights) clearly show that the IH denim material is substantially more durable than other well-made selvedge denim materials from other reputable brands, but I don't fully understand why, and I'd be interested to know why you think that is, and whether these will be even more insane.
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I had totally said I'd put these mostly on the back burner and keep wearing my 18 oz 555s almost daily until they're pretty completely broken in (they're at 16 months of almost exclusive daily wear now, so maybe another year?), but these quickly ended up in an even split with the 18 oz.
Unrelated… @Giles or @Alex, I'm curious for your thoughts on durability of these vs lighter jeans. The 18 is the most durable pair of jeans I've ever worn, and at least up to a certain point, more weight should certainly lead to more durability, though this is clearly not always the case, even within similar denims from the same brand. Do you expect more durability from these than from your lighter denim? I'd be curious if you could comment on what the most important factors for durability are. There are a number of ideas that get thrown around, and I've seen your thoughts on thread, etc, but I'm not sure I've ever seen your precise thoughts on the denim material itself. My 555s vs every other pair of selvedge denim I've put through the ringer (ranging from 21 oz Oni to 19 oz Samurai to 17 oz Pure Blue Japan to several others in lighter weights) clearly show that the IH denim material is substantially more durable than other well-made selvedge denim materials from other reputable brands, but I don't fully understand why, and I'd be interested to know why you think that is, and whether these will be even more insane.
What a question. to ask, am gonna keep it simple my way.
I started with alchemist skull jeans which where 15.5oz at the time that’s was 14 years ago along with pure japan blue.. still needed to go more heavy in oz
Then found iron heart I will says only one word they are the crown king, in my opinion they can not be beaten by anybody in this world that can do better than iron heart,
I have worn samurai, oni, flat head full count, and kamikaze wearing light to Heavy’s in oz
So my favourite brand is iron heart out of them all, the reason feel of the denim and it heavy oz has more durability and the buzz it.
Get yourself 25oz pair of jeans, you will know how it feel wearing against light jeans.
I like to wear heavy jeans all the time, am sure there more iron heart fans like me
thanks
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Simply. All other things being equal, the heavier the denim the more durable it will be. The quality of the cotton and the length of the cotton staple are also significant factors as too is the tightness of the weave.
Our double twisted yarn denims are stronger than the same weight denim constructed from a single weft, this is because the twisted weft makes the denim more supple, so there is less stress in the folds, whiskers, combs etc.
Of course, I am biased, but our 14oz denim is one of the most (if not the most) durable "lighter" weight denim I have ever worn. I am extremely tough on jeans and I wore my 14oz 666 almost every day for a year, I have retired them now, but they still have heaps of life left.
The one counter-intuitive thing is that if you are prone to crotch blows outs (I'm not) because of your physiology, you are more likely to blow the crotch on heavier (thicker) denim, because the friction is increased due to the thicker denim.
As a final thought, Haraki is extremely dismissive of other companies that make "heavy ounce" denim. He designs our denim to be a good as he can make them, he truly believes that others have jumped on the (his) heavy ounce bandwagon and just increase the weight of the weft and/or the warp with little understanding of what they are actually doing…...