A hook and bar fastening is a popular choice for the closure on tailored trousers, skirts and other garments. It is an alternative to a button closure, particularly where a clean, minimal look is required. It is also a fairly secure fastening that can generally hold more strain than a hook and eye fastening (which is normally just used as a light weight closure where two edges meet, rather than overlap).

The image above from the Dior Homme Autumn-Winter 2011 collection shows the position on mens trousers where this closure is most commonly used, as a sturdy way of fastening the waistband of mens or womens tailored trousers. It could also be used in a similar way on skirt waistbands.


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The diagram below shows how the hook and bar are normally positioned for a waistband that has an extended tab such as on the Dior Homme trousers above. The diagram also shows the position of the small internal button, sometimes called a jigger button, that helps to take some of the strain off the hook and bar closure. This internal button must be placed accurately so that the hook and bar can sit closed correctly. If the jigger button is not taking the strain of the waistband, then the hook and bar closure will look as though it is pulling open.

The images below show the other type of hook and bar that can be sewn on with small, neat buttonhole stitches around the loops at either end. It is best to test different types on small scraps of your fabric to determine if it will suit the needs of your garment. Bear in mind that you will also have a more secure fastening if the hooks and bars are secured to a strong internal layer, rather than just only being attached to a layer of fabric. So this could mean using strong fusing or a layer of interfacing or canvas as an under layer and attaching your hooks and bars through the fabric to the structure underneath.

The cropped hem style looks best with more modern suiting, and slim / tapered trousers. A fuller cut trouser or a straight leg may not look right, simply because of the width of the leg opening. However, a standard no-break hem (pant cuff barely resting on top of the shoe) can work well even with fuller cut trousers.

The most traditional, and most common, suit pant length would be the medium break. I would suggest going with a medium break if you need a more classic looking trouser. If you are younger, or if you have a more modern suit (like from Spier & Mackay, SuitSupply, or a similar brand) you can go with the quarter, or slight, break in your trousers.

So what about the law banning women from wearing trousers? In his analysis of the photo published on Reddit, Tran explains that there was a ruling by the Paris police that dated back to November 7, 1800, saying that any woman wishing to dress as a man must go to the police prefecture to obtain authorisation, which can only be given on the basis of a certificate from a health officer".

To cope with demanding outdoor working conditions, hi visibility trousers with reflective piping from PHS have a stain release finish and repel water. Combined with their fluorescent visibility in low light conditions, this makes them the ideal workwear trousers for many different trades and industries.

These machine-washable trousers sit smoothly above the hips and look tailored without feeling tight. A straight fit through the thigh and slight taper at the calf create an elongating effect, while deep pockets offer plenty of room to stash essentials.

1) You can select your usual size. Our trousers sizing is aligned to several UK/US brands and most Italian brands. You can use the conversion table below to see how our Italian sizing compares with the UK/US:

2) If you have a measuring tape you can compare the actual dimensions with one of your own pairs of trousers. Lay them on a flat surface and measure the half waist at the top. You can then select the best match based on the table below:

Now, an international team of archaeologists, fashion designers, geoscientists, chemists and conservators has untangled how those trousers were made and painstakingly created a modern replica. The vintage slacks weave a tale not only of textile innovation but also of how cultural practices fanned out across Asia, the researchers report in the March Archaeological Research in Asia.

He sported an outfit that consisted of the trousers, a poncho belted at the waist, one pair of braided bands to fasten the trouser legs below the knees, another pair to fasten soft leather boots at the ankles and a wool headband with four bronze disks and two seashells sewn on it. A leather bridle, wooden horse bit and battle-ax that had been placed in his grave indicated he had been a horse-riding warrior.

The botanist's trousers are an item obtainable as a reward from the Flash Powder Factory minigame. When worn, they provide a 1% boost (up to 6% when worn with the rest of the botanist's outfit) in experience while training Herblore.

The brown cotton trousers shown here were made by Levi Strauss & Co. of San Francisco, California sometime during the two decades after the company's founding in 1873. Levi Strauss was a 24-year old, newly minted American citizen from Bavaria when he set sail for San Francisco in 1853 to open a branch of his brother's New York City dry-goods business. He prospered by supplying blankets, handkerchiefs, and clothing to merchants in the West for the next two decades. In 1872, he received a business proposition from Jacob Davis, a Latvian-born tailor in Reno, Nevada. Davis had invented a way to strengthen trousers by reinforcing their pocket openings with copper rivets in order to help a customer who complained about his constantly torn pockets. He asked Levi Strauss to join him in patenting the process; then they would go into business together to sell their patented riveted pants.

Patent number 139,121 was granted on 20 May 1873, and production began immediately. The printed leather label at the center back waistband of these "waist overalls," as they were known in the late nineteenth century, suggests that the product was instantly popular with hard-working men who needed indestructible trousers. The label proclaims "Levi Strauss & Co." of "14 & 16 Battery Street SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. " to be the "Sole Proprietors and Manufacturers" of "PATENT RIVETED DUCK & DENIM CLOTHING. . . EVERY PAIR GUARANTEED. None Genuine Unless Bearing This Label. Any infringement on this Patent will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. LABEL COPYRIGHTED."

The company's patent expired in 1890, but the popularity of their riveted trousers became an American legend. Iron-clad cotton "duck" canvas (mentioned on the label, and seen in this pair of pants) was gradually phased out in favor of flexible cotton denim, a fabric that was much like the twilled cotton "jean" that had long been used for men's work clothes. By 1960, Levi's had come to be called "jeans" in both corporate advertising and the public's imagination.

The patented copper rivets that reinforced the upper corners of each pocket and the base of the fly set these trousers apart from all other work clothing of their day. Each rivet is inscribed "L. S. & CO. S. F. PAT. MAY 1873." The pants were fastened and supported by four-hole metal buttons; the two buttons hidden in the concealed fly are unmarked, but the rims of the one at the front waist, and the six suspender buttons around the waistband, are marked "LEVI STRAUSS & CO. S. F. CAL." e24fc04721

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