Model Guide
The Levis 501 was born in 1873 as the world's first jeans, the longest-running garment in apparel history at 150+ years. Known for its button fly and straight silhouette, it became a pop culture icon through Marlon Brando and James Dean. In the vintage market, models from the 1950s to early 1970s are particularly sought after, with quality examples commanding high prices worldwide. Beyond the basic red tab, care label, and zipper, precise 501 dating also requires examining rivets, arcuate stitching, cinch back, and waistband details.
The cinch back (waist adjustment strap on the back) is one of the oldest era indicators for vintage Levis. No belt loops + cinch back = pre-1922 (ultra-rare). Belt loops + cinch back + exposed back pocket rivets = 1922–1936. Cinch back + red tab = 1936–1937 (immediately after tab introduction). No cinch back = post-1937. Belt loop count is also an indicator: 7 belt loops = pre-1930s, 5 belt loops = post-1930s standard. Back belt loop positioned slightly off-center characterizes 1947–1965 examples.
Rivets are critical early-era indicators alongside buttons. Crotch rivet (at button fly base) present = pre-1937 (ultra-rare). Exposed back pocket rivets = pre-1937. Hidden back pocket rivets (visible from inside only) = 1937–1964. No back pocket rivets (bartack closure) = post-1964–1966. No coin pocket rivet = 1942–1947 (WWII metal rationing). Rivet material: copper with raised/convex lettering = pre-1960s. Copper with recessed/lowered lettering = post-1966. 'Crowned arrow' rivet stamp = late 1930s–1960s. 'L.S. & Co. S.F. Cal.' rivet stamp = 1930s–1960s.
The arcuate back pocket stitching can be dated by thread color and SPI (stitches per inch). No chain stitch (hem only) = pre-1933. Arcuate painted only (no stitching) = 1942–1947 (WWII, thread conservation) — paint has mostly worn off on surviving pieces, leaving plain-looking pockets. Orange thread, high SPI (10–11), slightly irregular = pre-1955. Orange thread, looser (9–10 SPI), more uniform = 1955–1970. Lemon/yellow thread = mid-1960s to mid-1970s (rare). Any yellow thread present = confirms pre-mid-1970s. Copper/orange thread (return) = post-late 1970s. Bright yellow/synthetic thread = post-1983.
501 dating priority order: ①red tab (Big E = pre-1971, Small e = post-1971) ②care label presence (absent = confirmed pre-1971) ③selvedge (present = pre-1985) ④rivet condition (crotch rivet = pre-1937, hidden rivets = 1937–1964) ⑤arcuate thread color (yellow = pre-mid-1970s, paint only = WWII era) ⑥cinch back (present = pre-1937). Era quick reference: pre-1937: cinch back, crotch rivet, exposed rivets. 1937–1954: hidden rivets, leather patch, Big E, no care label. 1955–1971: synthetic patch, Big E, no care label, selvedge. 1971–1981: Small e, care label, selvedge. 1981+: no selvedge.
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