Most of us pull on a pair of jeans without a second glance, barely registering the tiny metal pieces near the pockets.
Small, round, and usually matching the rest of the hardware, they blend right in. To many people, they look like purely decorative accents meant to make denim appear rugged or “authentic.” But those little metal dots aren’t just style choices. They’re rivets — and without them, jeans wouldn’t have survived the heavy use that shaped their history.
The Rivet: A Small Detail With a Big Job
A rivet is a basic metal fastener, pressed through layers of fabric to strengthen areas that take the most stress — corners, seams, and pockets that get tugged and pulled every day. Today we see them as part of the classic denim look, but in the 1870s, they were invented out of pure practicality.