One of the greatest tragedies in heritage denim was the closure of cone mills white oak plant at the end of 2017.
Levis white oak cone denim.
Cone mills white oak shut.
Cone s famed selvedge denim has been made in the white oak plant since it was purchased in 1905 and so called because the plant once stood in the shadow of a giant oak tree.
At the turn of 2018 one of the us s last and oldest selvedge denim makers closed its doors ending the longest standing partnership in american selvedge denim history.
Cone s denim heritage dates back to 1891 and fuels the natural passion and inspiration for denim designers and their connections to our historic white oak mill which produced denim from 1905 to 2017.
Shop selvedge denim jeans that feature attention to every detail.
The white oak shop lives on as a tribute to the talent legacy and innovation that will forever be the heart and soul of cone denim.
After 112 years in operation cone mills white oak closed its doors in 2017 bringing an end to a long standing partnership between levi s and the north carolina mill.
The greensboro north carolina facility was the last and oldest operating selvedge denim mill left in the united states.
In 1915 levi s and cone mills made what s called the golden handshake an agreement saying cone mills would produce all of levi s proprietary xx denim more widely known as their shrink to fit denim.
Levi s premium quality selvedge denim for men come with a clean tailored look.
Cone mills white oak plant the last selvedge denim mill in the united states would close permanently on december 31 2017.
Here the denim is made on american draper shuttle looms the last remaining in operation anywhere and as far as cone is aware of a variety that never made it to.
Cone mills was one of the last producers of american selvedge denim and had been supplying levi s with its xx 501 selvedge denim since back when woodrow wilson was in office 1913 give or a take a few years.
If you ve recently found yourself on the hunt for a pair of jeans utilizing cone mills white oak denim before there are none left to be had you may be in luck by way of none other than levi s themselves.
In december the cone mills white oak plant stopped production and when it did the world of american made denim was forever altered.
International textile group cone s parent company cited the reason as changes in market demand have significantly reduced order volume at the facility as customers have.
The white oak plant was the last remaining selvedge denim factory left in the united states producing at scale.