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Still sexy after all those years?

In the Old West, on May 20, 1873, a deal was struck between tailor Jacob Davis and cloth manufacturer Levi Strauss. It was a deal that would make history, as the two patented jeans with their signature copper rivets to reinforce points of strain. Selling them to tough gold miners, cowboys, and lumberjacks, they could never have imagined that their patent would be embraced by so many subcultures years later — greasers, rockers, and hippies, just to name a few.

 

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Levi’s jeans had in fact become so popular that even major car manufacturers decided to offer “Jeans” editions of their models, some featuring Levi’s badges on the exterior and denim-trimmed interiors. The lady above is pictured with an AMC Gremlin, but there was also a VW Beetle as well as a Jeep CJ-7 — and you may know of more. More recently, Ferrari hotshot and male fashionista Lapo Elkann had the interior of his Ferrari 599 GTB retrimmed in denim, and his marque now even sells its own line of jeans (starting at $145). One wonders what the lumberjacks and cowboys would think of it.



Words Jeroen Booij, picture AMC Public Relations

 

Published:
Monday March 2nd, 2026
Ryder Forsyth
08 March, 12:43
In the early 1980s I worked in marketing for a major UK Coca-Cola business, and for one of our big summer promotions I put together a competition featuring three top prizes of customised two-seater sports cars. My first choice was Fiat but they refused to supply their lovely little X19 model (they were selling more than they could produce), so reluctantly we turned to BL who offered the then-new TR7 coupe.

The cars were painted Coca-Cola red, with what the company called their 'dynamic contour' (the white wavy line) along both sides, and we teamed up with Levi Strauss who upholstered the car seats in blue denim. Frankly that was the best part of the car; the TR7 was so badly put together that our competition was heavily featured on Esther Rantzen's 'That's Life' tv show - repeatedly. One car even failed to start while being presented to a winner at a televised national tennis championship, and had to be delivered to the winner's home on a trailer.

Despite huge embarrassment the promotion was judged a great success. It generated an enormous amount of 'free' publicity and you occasionally see one of these cars come up for sale at a premium over the standard car. But I still shudder whenever I see a TR7 on the road.
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