âFor years, Iâve been making LVC products and sometimes wishing I could make things more cropped or make the sleeves wider,â OâNeill said, âbut we were kind of fenced in with trying to reproduce a historical product. When we started to work on Blue Tab, all of that opened up. We were able to take the best things from Leviâs, the DNA, and then create much more modern silhouettes.â
The debut collectionâwhich dropped in Japan over the weekend and lands in the US in Aprilâdoes include spruced-up, selvedge-denim spins on flagship Leviâs cuts like the 501 and 502, but notably also introduces two new fits to the canon, both of which seek to satisfy current tastes for baggier jeans: the âelevated and effortlessâ Marker Loose and the ânot quite loose, but wider than a 501â Anchor Relaxed. âHistorically, there’s been a lot of slim fits at Levi’s with the 511, the 502,â OâNeill said. âSo it’s nice to push beyond the other side of the 501, where it starts getting a little bit looser.â
In addition to the jean selection, Blue Tabâs offerings include a grip of crisp, refined, indigo-tinged staples. Thereâs a handful of roomy denim shirts; a mellow cropped jacket based on a 1950s Boy Scouts zip-up; and a standout flowy suit for women, with OâNeill promising a menâs version to come in 2026.
When observed in motion during the runway showâon a procession of sprightly models dressed in a manner befitting the average Fort Greene creative directorâthe line seems precisely dialed to service the way people are wearing denim now. Which is to say: just about everywhere with just about everything. âOnly a few years ago,â OâNeill recalled, âpeople just didnât want to wear denim-on-denim. It was a kind of joke. But now doing that is really cool if you do it the right wayâthereâs definitely been a switch where denim is becoming a little more progressive, less one trick. Thereâs kids wearing real vintage jeans with Air Maxes, people wearing beautiful wide-leg denim with blazers. Itâs becoming more diverse, more sophisticated, and that makes things way more interesting.â
OâNeill said that while concocting Blue Tab, he spent a lot of time thinking about the infamous story behind the original Canadian Tuxedoâin which Bing Crosby, then one of the biggest stars in the world, was turned away from a Vancouver hotel because he strolled in wearing Leviâs. In response, the brand tailored Crosby an actual denim tuxedo jacket with a patch that read, To Hoteliers Everywhere: Please Allow the Wearer of this Garment Into Your Institution. âThat really resonated with me,â OâNeill said, âbecause why should denim be restricted from taking part in certain occasions or events? I like the idea of trying to take that stigma away, where someone can maybe wear a denim suit to a wedding. Thatâs not the main goal, but itâs nice just to open things up and shake off [preconceived ideas] and give this collection a new life and new sense of opportunity.â
And to bring that new vision to life, OâNeill knew there was only one place on Earth he could turn. âThe best denim in the world is coming from Japan,â he said, matter-of-factly. Blue Tabâs contemporary mandate meant that OâNeill had the full capabilities of the Leviâs Japanese manufacturing vendorsâthe legendary Kaihara Mill for fabrics and longtime Leviâs partner SAAB Group for productionâat his disposal. âWe got to explore all these techniques we werenât really interested in for LVC: laser patterns, certain dye techniques. Now we could experiment with, well, what would happen if we had the core of the yarn this color and then applied the indigo on top and then scraped and washed it?â
While visiting SAABâs sprawling finishing facilities about an hour outside of Tokyo, I watched in awe as workers seamlessly whisked together state-of-the-art processes (lasering fades onto jeans in the blink of an eye with pinpoint accuracy) with artful old-school ones (adding frays and rips by hand using a specially carved wooden block and a power sander). âNo matter what we threw at them, they would never say no,â OâNeill said. âThey were willing to try anything, would come up with solutions, and wanted the challenge. That felt really cool.â
The result is a denim line that looks and feels distinctly 2025. Thereâs an essence of Americana thatâs inherent to everything Leviâs and a quality of construction distinctive to Japanese craftsmanship, only peppered with a sense of discovery and freshness you donât often associate with a brand closing in fast on its second century. With Blue Tab, one could argue, OâNeill might have just cracked the code for the kind of jeans thatâll someday be coveted in the same Tokyo vintage stores he was originally floored by on that fateful first trip to Japan.