Item 2018.178.1 - Levi's ICD+ Storage Jacket

Identity area

Reference code

2018.178.1

Title

Levi's ICD+ Storage Jacket

Date(s)

  • 2001 (Creation)

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1 of 3

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Name of creator

(1853-)

Administrative history

Levi’s is a brand of jeans produced by American company Levi Strauss & Co. The company was established in San Francisco by German Jewish immigrant Levi Strauss (1829–1902) in 1853, originally to sell dry goods and garments manufactured on the East Coast. They began supplying ready-made work trousers, called ‘waist overalls’, out of cotton indigo-dyed denim across the American West. They were worn by miners, mill workers, railroad workers, lumberjacks and cowboys. Jacob W. Davis (1831–1908), a Jewish tailor in Reno, Nevada, sourced denim cloth from the company and developed a process to strengthen stress points on the garments by adding copper rivets to the bespoke overalls he was making. Davis partnered with Levi Strauss & Co. to expand production, and in 1873 they were granted a joint patent for the innovation. In 1890 the overalls were given the production lot number 501, the name of the design model still in production.
From the 1920s denim jeans began expanding beyond the market for heavy work wear; cowboy films produced by Hollywood exposed the garment to a wider audience; during the Second World War, American servicemen took Levi’s jeans with them abroad. Film was again pivotal in the 1950s for Levi’s, as movies such as The Wild One (1953) starring Marlon Brando and Rebel Without a Cause (1955) featuring James Dean created an association of the label with youth, rebellion and cool. Levi’s had become sought-after worldwide. In the early 1950s, the company opened their first UK factory in Acton, London (moving to Northampton in 1973) and by 1954 Bill Green, owner of the pioneering Vince Man’s Shop in Soho, London, was selling unshrunk Levi’s both in his shop and by mail order. The company became a global fashion brand through the 1960s and 1970s; 1980 saw 25 million pairs of jeans sold in the UK, up from 6 million pairs in 1970, with Levi’s dominating the market. However, later in the 1980s saw a drop in sales prompting the company to commission a series of influential advertising campaigns in the UK and, in 1985, the £4 million pan-European television and cinema spots ‘Bath’ and ‘Laundrette’ for Levi’s 501. June 1986 saw British street style magazine BLITZ commissioning twenty-two designers to customize a Levi’s denim trucker jacket to raise money for charity. Designers of the jackets included Vivienne Westwood, John Galliano and Katharine Hamnett and were displayed for three months at the V&A Museum.

Launched in 1999, the Levi’s RED collection drew inspiration from the brand’s history and refined it into a product with a streamlined, minimalist design aesthetic. The company introduced Levi’s Engineered Jeans in the same year, which deconstructed and redesigned the standard five-pocket jeans for comfort and mobility. In 2000 Levi’s formed a design research label, the Industrial Clothing Division+ (ICD+) in collaboration with Philips Electronics and Italian designer Massimo Osti. Philips had been focusing their research and development on a project called Philips Wearable Electronics, and the ICD+ range was the first outcome available to consumers. Levi’s has also collaborated with Junya Watanabe, Supreme, Heron Preston, Beams, Google and Lego.
Sources: Michael Harris, Jeans of the Old West: A History (Atglen. PA: Schiffer, 2016); Emma McClendon, Denim: Fashion’s Frontier (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press with the Fashion Institute of Technology, 2016); Paul Jobling, Advertising Menswear: Masculinity and Fashion in the British Media Since 1945 (London: Bloomsbury, 2014); Daniela Facchinato, Ideas from Massimo Osti (Bologna: Damiani, 2012); Iain R. Webb, As Seen in BLITZ: Fashioning ’80s Style (Woodbridge: ACC, 2014); The Guardian.

Name of creator

(1891-)

Administrative history

Name of creator

(17 Jun 1944-6 Jun 2005)

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Sand-coloured hooded jacket with integrated wearable technology features, part of Levi's ICD+ Storage jacket collection, launched in summer 2001 as the second season of the ICD+ range. The jacket includes contrasting black trims, a black mesh lining with taped seams, and adjustable Velcro tabs at the collar and cuffs. It fastens at the centre front with a concealed zip under a Velcro-secured placket.

Designed with large, curved pockets, the jacket accommodates the Philips Xenium mobile phone, Rush MP3 player, and earphones, along with purpose-built channels for wiring. A central control module links all devices, allowing the wearer to control each device via a unified remote. A hidden fabric loop and channel neatly route the earphone wiring to the hood, where the earphones are stowed until needed, maintaining a tidy appearance while ensuring easy device access.

Additionally, the jacket can be folded into the two main pockets, with zips around the pockets allowing it to transform into a shoulder bag with clasp fastenings, as per instructions in the manual. The ICD+ range was pioneering, marking the first commercial collection designed to fully integrate consumer electronics within the garment.
Country of Design: Belgium
Country of Manufacture: Indonesia.

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      100% Polyester
      Colour/Print: Sand
      Details: wearable technology, smart clothing
      Label: Product: Storage Carrier Jacket. Information: levi.com Levi's Industrial Clothing Division. Care label: 100% Polyester Made in Indonesia

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      Note

      The Philips-Levi's *Industrial Clothing Division Plus* (ICD+) range was launched in 2000 after a five-year development project. Each garment featured an integrated communications system, including a Philips Xenium GSM mobile, a Philips Rush MP3 player, and Philips earphones embedded in the collar, all controlled by a unified remote control pad. These devices were interconnected through a Personal Area Network (PAN), with wiring integrated within the jackets.

      The ICD+ range's technology integration was designed by Jenni Arksey, Fashion Designer at Levi's, and Nancy Tilbury, Small Apparel Designer at Philips Design, while Massimo Osti was responsible for the garment designs.

      Note

      Invisible Men Exhibition Label:

      ICD+ STORAGE JACKET
      Levi’s
      2000

      Industrial Clothing Design Plus – ICD+ – was a range produced by Levi’s in partnership with Philips and designed by Massimo Osti. This jacket was the first commercial garment designed to house a variety of fully-integrated consumer electronics including a Philips Xenium mobile phone, a Rush MP3 player and earphones with purpose-built channels through the garment to hold the wiring.

      Polyester
      Archive no. 2018.178.1

      Note

      From Inside the Westminster Menswear Archive:

      ICD+ STORAGE JACKET
      Levi’s
      2000
      In 1996, the Dutch multinational corporation Philips held an exhibition titled Vision of the Future, posing the question, ‘How would life be in 2005?’ It explored new product and service concepts across multiple ‘domains’ of life – personal, domestic, public and mobile. In response
      Philips launched the Wearables project in 1997, resulting in a collaboration with Levi’s called Industrial Clothing Division Plus (ICD+), and the commercial release of four wearable technology jackets in 2000. This jacket, designed by Massimo Osti, was the first commercial garment to incorporate a variety of fully integrated consumer electronics, including a Philips Xenium mobile phone, a Rush MP3 player, and earphones, via purpose-built channels running through the garment.
      Polyester
      Archive no. 2018.178.1

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          Sources

          Andrew Bolton, The Supermodern Wardrobe (London: V&A Publications, 2002), pp. 15, 18-19.

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