What was the 1970s name for skinny jeans?

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Hot pants or hip huggers are what I have heard skinny jeans called. I never knew what skinny jeans were until one of my kids explained it to me. I've only heard them called hot pants or hip huggers

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Sasson and Jordache were the popular tight designer jeans of the second half of 70's early 80's and often referred by the brand.

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I was a 1970s teenager. I wore nothing but jeans and I have your answer. I think what you are looking for is “ hip huggers”. That’s what we called jeans that were tight and low. My favorite boutique was a little place in Los Angeles called “ Bottoms Up” that sold them. Hope this helps.

Upvote:1

My memory of the time was coming out of the late hippie era with the iconic pure bell-bottom jeans which were usually tight above the knee, then belled (not flared) out to usually past the shoe tip. So tight above the knee, belled below. Naturally (like that or not) "tight" was tighter in women's bell-bottoms than men's.

Starting into my high school years bell-bottoms were done, but a more reasonable, and very comfortable "flare" style had evolved from them. The flaring seldom reached the toe of your shoe, usually just covered the laces.

But a few years later, even before I graduated, flared jeans were out. What replaced them were the straight-legged jeans referred to in other answers. By the time the 80's began, they had a corollary for people who just weren't going to wear those uncomfortable things called boot-cut which were also basically as described above in other answers. Straight-leg jeans were called "jeans" by most people after flared jeans went away, while boot-cut jeans were called just that.

Both styles had more room in them above the knees than bell-bottoms or flared jeans did. Levi less so than Wrangler, to the point I found Wranglers very uncomfortable as nothing was held in place. Unlike Blowfly's Rollo, I did not like a fresh pair of baggies.

At the end of the 70's designer jeans had not become much of a thing, at least not in Ohio. I believe that's because they had to evolve in response to the late 70's standard jeans having more room inside above the knees. A couple years of that and women (just doesn't seem like a male-driven demand, does it?) demanded more form-fitting jeans. For the obvious reasons. And designer jeans stepped in to handle that.

DJ's were much tighter above the knees and given what they were responding to (my take anyway), they chose to be tighter than the straight-leg jeans. Bear in mind straight-leg jeans are still "frumpy" in that they usually can get pushed up some, crumpled might be a better word, right around those delicate ankles. As hard to see a girl has a well-turned ankle wearing that kind of thing as it is to see she has a nicely shaped bottom when there's intentionally extra room there... (think: the difference between flat panel pants and pleated pants... mom and grandma wear the pleated pants). And given that they were female driven to be tight anywhere real form desired to be shown off, they just kept getting tighter. About 1989, I picked up a couple kids, cousins of my boss, to bring them to an outing and they somehow got on the subject of their mom's "fat jeans", jeans that weren't tight much, said they were OK when I asked if she'd been wearing them just then when I picked them up and that I thought they fit her very nicely, just not like her good ones that didn't make her look fat at all.

My bet is that Lisa wasn't the only woman calling some jeans fat jeans and others being much more her going out jeans. 2005, for sure? I wager "skinny jeans" as a name took about that 16 years plus another 2–3 before 1989, to develop out of "fat jeans" for non-tight ("non-taut" might be better), and be given an actual name that suited the concept. And "fat jeans" would have disappeared then.

Back to the 70's though, in Ohio. In my experience, anything store brand or close was just "jeans" and as best as I remember, they were fairly tight. Some had flares, but still were fairly tight above the knees, maybe to save cloth/cost. Until flares had died out and straight-leg jeans took over, whereupon straight-leg jeans got called "jeans", generically. I truly remember nothing in the 70's as tight as skinny jeans, and the only things as tight as designer jeans would be in the 80's were store brand jeans.

The upshot is, at least from the standpoint of what I saw in Ohio and on TV, there were NO skinny jeans in the 70's, neither by name (of course... 2005) nor by actual construction. There WERE tight ones, but just that, tight. Not meant to stick to the body. It wasn't until the mid-80's anyone even talked about "painted on jeans" (whereupon a couple of men's magazines literally did that, and then it became an occasional artist thing).

My take on what drove it was female desires. My wife is not alone in having answered my question about "Would you rather have comfort or look good?" with the latter. And then prove it. Women will also spend far more than the average man on a piece of clothing. Those two factors, along with a couple years that must have been horrifying to them in which the jeans that were tight above the knees disappeared and only frumpy ones were available to most or all of us, created the designer market, I believe. Until that existed, there had been tight, in the places of greatest interest and for men as well as women, jeans, but not tight everywhere. I have no memory whatever of anything really approaching "skinny jeans" in the 70's. Even the old hip-huggers didn't qualify: they were more about lowering the waistline a lot and having to be very tight to stay in place, though doing double duty as a great reason to have them, and being tight on the thighs too, but out of habit so-to-speak. Without them, the designer jeans market might not have taken tight to its "logical conclusion", but they were not in any way skinny jeans, especially since they fell into the bell-bottom era and had belled legs.

The closest I remember in the 70's would have been Capris, very, very tight all the way down, but almost never made in jeans since the point was the tightness and jean material of that day was just too solid to really be tight like that. Brushed denim (mid-70's, dead early in the 80's) had to be developed before Capris could be made of anything considered denim (brushed denim was all that denim-like, really). If I were to guess, as designer jeans makers tried to seem Euro even if they might not have been, and Capris were definitely fairly gone as a major thing in the US by the end of the 50's, though never gone altogether, not at all, that maybe Capris were still in in Europe, and gave the "designers" an inspiration that lead to the ludicrosity of skinny jeans.

Don't get me wrong. I love a woman's form being utterly on view. I love a woman saying "I only wear pants to keep from being arrested, so I wear something that makes me just as naked." But skinny jeans look ridiculous.

Just like head hair has a purpose beyond wacky styling (it helps give one's head a more pleasing shape, if one's head is... unfortunately shaped), pants have a similar helping hand to offer. Or both, of course, can just be worn without that concern.

And I just flat do not remember them in the 70's at all. So I think there isn't a great true name for you to use in the story. The best I can suggest is a tangential reference, something like "If he had the hair and 200 extra pounds, his jeans would let him look like Elvis. He's even got the sneered up lip, from regarding the rest of us. He doesn't seem to get that the odd man out isn't everyone he sees, it's the odd man, and man, when it comes to odd... !"

As you can tell, not an author. But I did live through the 70's and just don't remember any skinny jeans or anything like them.

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In the midwest U.S. in the early-to-mid 1960s, for boys/men the super-tight customized jeans were "pegged" (as @jamesqf comments above). Kids (or their moms?!?) could do this at home, to plain jeans, keeping the cost waaaay below any sort of designer stuff. These were typically paired with black heeled boots, maybe with metal taps, reaching above the ankle. Also black leather jackets, though these were not cheap. Maybe tight white T-shirts (just like in the movies, indeed...). Anyway, yes, "peg-leg" or "pegged-leg" or just "pegged" jeans.

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As other pointed out, drainpipes. Or at least that was the commonest polite term used in UK/Ireland in the 70s for these jeans.

Earthier phrases were used, depending on the wearer. Balls cutters and suchlike.

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Your question appears to include historical fiction. I.e. the story is fiction, but set in a historical period, and you are looking for information for your story, rather than just the single question of what they were called. Thus, I am reading into the intent of your question. Rather than discuss what was, I'll focus on what was common and where.

The equivalent of "skinny jeans" would have been uncommon in much of the country. Today's "skinny jeans", essentially all women's jeans, and most men's jeans have some amount of synthetic material - nylon, polyester, lycra, etc. This creates a more form-fitting look that is also comfortable, since it will stretch and move. infobloom

1970's jeans for the common person generally were 100% denim cotton. They would often be advertised as "shrink to fit". Levi's would be purchased fitting, but also just a little big, vs. a little small. Because they would shrink when wet, so if they were already too tight, they'd shrink and not fit at all. Cotton does stretch a little bit. (Today's jeans are pre-shrunk.) When buying shrink-to-fit, one common practice was to take a shower in your brand new jeans. Let them dry on you, then run them through the dryer to finish them off. Then, you've got very form-fitting jeans. These would be quite tight. Shrink to fit seems to have died out in the 1980's.

"Designer Jeans" may have some polyester, such as the ones listed on this ThePeopleHistory site:

Polyester is normally lower-cost than cotton, it was and is more common in higher-priced jeans.

While stretch materials have been around since the 1950's, they weren't commonly used in clothing until the 1980's when spandex became very popular. HistoryOfJeans

Additional information on materials-- study.com

Where is the story set? Where is the character from? How about their family or friends? Do they travel? What is their income level, and compared to their friends? "Commoners" would have a different opinion than the wealthy. While "hand-made" clothes from a common person would be considered cheap, "hand-made" by a tailor would be very high-end to a wealthy person. Maybe these jeans are hand-made by his mother/grandmother or a tailor?

Folks in the "flyover" states and small towns and cities would have a different type of common clothing than the fashion in metropolis areas. They have a different common store. Think K-Mart and Sears compared to Nordstrom, Diesel, White House Black Market or many of the boutique shops.

This information, combined with the other answers should give you a nice, plausible, and helpful information for your story.

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After doing more research, and reading the responses, I believe I've come to two reasonable conclusions:

1: There are simply many names for it depending on time and location, following no other pattern than a description of the pant. Previous commented answers include "skin tights" (Fred), just "tight jeans" (Andrew), and "straight legs" (JRE), all of which are reasonable (if you'll forgive me basing this on opinion).

2: As I continued to do more research, I stumbled across a source that stated (in an English speaking country, at least) these pants were called "drainpipe jeans" in the 60s. Being that that's only a decade away from the target date, I think my research on the matter is enough for a fictionalized 1970.

Many thanks to all who took the time to share your ideas! I will probably use a little bit of all of them. If more needs to be done, or there are more suggestions, I'll keep an eye on this page.

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This is from Wikipedia, showing Elvis Presley wearing drainpipes: Slim-fit pants/The 1950s.

Elvis Presley wearing drainpipe jeans. In the 1950s; the waist was higher than on modern skinny jeans.

The 1950s

Drainpipe trousers re-emerged in the 1950s, with popular Western stars such as the singing cowboy Roy Rogers, The Lone Ranger, The Cisco Kid, Zorro and Gene Autry and actresses Marilyn Monroe and Sandra Dee wearing their pants very slim to the ankle from 1955 onwards. Tapered jeans became most notable with country music stars and with the birth of rock and roll in the 1950s, when Elvis Presley donned slim-fitting jeans and shocked the country.

Upvote:41

In the 1970's there were 3 basic poles of jeans in the USA:

Levis, Wranglers, and "Designer".

If you wanted to wear fully tight jeans, you were probably wearing "Designer jeans". These were largely worn by women, as the traditional jeans, being positioned as work pants for manual labor, generally weren't designed to fit women very well. The name is due to the fact that they often had established fashion designer labels on them, like Armani and Calvin Klein.

The typical points of ridicule on designer jeans were that they were orders of magnitude more expensive, and for men, that they were "women's jeans". Often designer jeans were clarified as "skin-tight designer jeans", but its reasonable to assume there's a high likeleyhood of "skin-tight" applying if someone just says "designer jeans" in the 1970s.

One specific type of designer jeans I remember from the 70's was the hip-huggers. These were generally designed to top out at the top of the hips, and be particularly tight along the hips and thighs.

Levis are of course the "OG" jeans. People who wear them would sometimes identify them by their model number (501 being the "base model", as it were), but more often by how they diverged from the 501. Divergences would be things like buttonfly, bell-bottoms, boot-cut, etc.

Wranglers were a cheaper alternative to Levis, often proudly worn by people who believed strongly that spending a lot of money on jeans was antithetical to the concept of jeans. Wrangler wearers generally held designer jeans up to particular scorn. Wrangler and Levis wearers had a tendency to be tribal about it, and you'd find arguments between them that sounded a lot like PC vs. Mac or Coke vs. Pepsi arguments.

So what today would be called "skinny jeans", the closest thing to them cut-wise in the 1970's (in the US at least) would have been called "skin-tight Designer jeans".

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