A decade ago, when Laura Baker was still managing wholesale for fashion brands, retailers often avoided embellished or outlandish menâs denim because shoppers were content with the plain heritage styles they stocked, she said.
Now, Baker says denim drops are akin to hyped sneaker releases amongst her menswear customers at ESSX, the multi-brand boutique she opened in New York in 2023.
âWe definitely have people on waitlists, on hold for them,â she said, pointing to jeans by Los Angeles label 424 crafted out of calf leather but treated to resemble washed black denim as an example. âThe jeans were so insane that before we even unpacked the box, they were already out the door.â
Expressive jeans with bold graphic prints, intense embellishments such as illustrative embroidery and extremely baggy silhouettes, usually more common within womenâs denim, are proliferating in menâs denim as guys embrace more variety in their jeans. Baker said Acne Studiosâ photo-realistic trompe lâoeil denim, which creates the illusion of overly accessorised jeans through a print, are nearly impossible to keep in stock. StockX reports the top two pairs of jeans on its platform, representing 27 percent of all trades in the category, are from Leviâs collaboration with Denim Tears, which covers Leviâs 501 jeans in Denim Tearsâ white âcotton wreathâ logos.
Niche brands within the space are picking up the most traction. Retail insights company Edited said the denim brand with the most inventory at Mr. Porter is Japanese cult label Kapital, with 54 percent of it including badging, patchwork and jacquard designs. On runways, the look is showing up in the work of labels like Who Decides War, known for its elaborately reworked denim, and in the collaborations brands like Sacai and Walter Van Beirendonck have done with denim giants such as Leviâs and G-Star.
âThe appetite for wearing more creative and wild fits has expanded and exploded, especially in menswear,â said Amy Leverton of Denim Dudes, a consultancy and trend forecasting company that works with brands such as Leviâs and Gap.
Denim consultants donât anticipate the trend will flood the mass market, as trends in menswear tend to move slowly and many guys still gravitate toward more conservative options. But it is trickling down, particularly among younger consumers willing to try bolder denim styles, creating sales opportunities for brands thinking beyond traditional five-pocket jeans.
âAnecdotally, I will say thereâs a big white space for menâs denim right now,â said Benjamin Talley Smith, a denim consultant who has worked for brands such as Helmut Lang, Everlane and Walmart.
The Opportunity in Menâs Denim
That white space is wide open. Smith pointed out that, unlike the typical situation in womenswear, there isnât one dominant brand seen as the pinnacle in this category of menâs denim.
But consultants such as Leverton see the space being filled by a growing wave of expressive indie denim designers flourishing on social media. During the pandemic, brands such as Japanâs Proleta Re Art and Paradoxe Paris â two emerging labels that have also collaborated with big names such as Gucci and Rick Owens in recent years â began experimenting and posting their work online, where they started to attract a following. Leverton also pointed to Utah-based Bad Son, which released its first piece of viral denim â a pair of âOvergrowthâ denim cargo pants with embroidery that resembled ivy vines â in 2022. Since then, the brand has accumulated over 200,000 followers on Instagram.
Bad Son co-founder Conner Lobato said the brand, whose jeans are priced from $160 to $200, is today a âpant-first company,â with its Overgrowth denim becoming a staple. It has done around $2.1 million in sales this year, he noted, with only two collections, sold solely through an e-commerce store thatâs been open for just two weeks.
âYou can wear a simple top and have a bold pair of pants just do all the talking,â said Hieu Tran, Bad Sonâs other co-founder, who handles most of the design work for the DTC label.
Leverton believes part of the appeal of smaller labels such as Bad Son comes from consumers having to âbe in the knowâ about the brand. The labelâs founders agree, pointing out how the boldness and unconventional embellishments on their denim act as a signal to those who know what to look for. âAnyone that knows or sees a pair of our pants, out on the street, itâs easy to tell itâs from Bad Son,â said Tran.
How Edgy Menâs Jeans Are Moving The Needle for Mass Denim
The challenge for retailers is working out the right mix of boundary-pushing designs and more conventional styles in their assortments. Although Leverton personally finds more directional denim exciting, she said most denim consumers are still looking for regular jeans. However, she now advises her clients to think outside of the traditional five-pocket.
âThat could just be through a twisted seam detail, a laser monogram pattern on just the back pocket. Itâs just moving the needle slightly.â said Leverton.
That approach is on display at Urban Outfitters, where denim is a âcornerstoneâ of the retailerâs business, according to chief merchandising officer Marybeth Cahill. Currently, Cahill says the best menâs denim sellers for its BDG private label are baggy jeans boasting details such as cargo pockets, track pant stripes and even an embroidered spider by the back pocket. The company designed its denim programme with insight from an âUO Insidersâ group that includes 6,000 customers between the ages of 18-26.
âFor us, itâs really just about providing that balance for them and not swinging the pendulum one way or the other, which some retailers can do,â said Cahill.
She added that the denim industry may have put its male customers in a box too much in the past, limiting what it offered them. But menâs tastes have changed, she said, with social media providing everyone with greater access to fashion scenes in metropolitan cities.
Smith said he even draws on menâs denim in the work he does consulting for womenâs brands such as Khaite. Heâs been introducing baggier fits and referencing vintage Jnco jeans from the 1990s and utilitarian menâs styles.
At ESSX, Baker said customers can still find five-pocket jeans by Our Legacy. They sell well as a staple, but they donât move as fast as statement jeans by Acne Studios or Y/Project.
âRight now itâs been so much about the extreme,â she said. âWe just started carrying Luâu Dan, who has some of the largest pants Iâve ever seen in this industry and theyâve gone so fast for us.â
Sheâll continue looking for âreally interestingâ denim as a buyer for now, until the pendulum swings back.