A Short History
The cropped hemline wasn’t always welcome. On the island of Bermuda in the 1910s, British workers cut their trousers out of necessity. Heat, humidity, and practicality. Practical by design, iconic by accident. Shorts didn’t reach casual wear until the ’60s, when showing skin began to lose its edge.
Denim entered through counterculture, an act of resistance. Chino and tailored cuts followed through workwear and collegiate dressing, bringing structure to the hemline. By the ’90s, the silhouette went wide. Baggy fits, hems below the knee, low waists. The fit itself was a statement.











