Why Jeans are Usually Blue in Color
Jeans are made of denim, a hard fabric of cotton. he denim name comes from that name’s serge de Nîmes, from the French town. Serge is a twill form, a name for clothes produced in the weft and warp (vertical and horizontal axes) with distinct threads. In denim, this distinction is one colored and one undyed thread, making a cheaper cloth-you need only half the dye. It almost seems redundant to call your trousers “blue jeans” because almost all denim is blue. While jeans are likely your wardrobe’s most versatile plants, blue is not a particularly neutral color. Ever wonder why the go-to hue is this?