Plavi džins, jako i izdržljivo platno za izradu farmerske odeće, posebno pantalona, farmerke.
džin · Džingis Kan · džingo · džinovska žaba · džinovska žena · džinovska sekoja · džinovski · džins · džip · džihad · Džojs · džojstik · džogirati · džoint · džokej · džoker · džokeri · džomba
Pants usually made of blue denim
Denim trousers, traditionally blue, originally cut from jean cloth (jene fustian), a heavy canvas made in Genoa, Italy. In the 1850s Levi Strauss (18301902), a Bavarian immigrant to the US, made sturdy trousers for goldminers in San Francisco out of jean material intended for wagon covers. Hence they became known as Levis. Later a French fabric, serge de Nîmes (corrupted to denim), was used. Denim jeans became fashionable casual wear in the 1950s in the US and have since been produced in a wide variety of styles by many designers