Blue jeans were initially made for workers who trekked west in hopes of striking gold—literally—or making their living as cowboys and miners. Which means that they were specifically designed to withstand a certain lifestyle—one that involved hacking away at rocks, and shoveling coal, and guzzling whiskey, and not owning a washing machine for a century. And since then, we’ve hardly touched the iconic style. The latest and greatest development in blue jeans was the introduction of stretchy elastane, which has been around for decades but only gained mainstream acceptance with brands like Levi’s a couple years ago. Enter New York–based denim brand 3x1 and its collaboration with Joe Doucet, a designer known for rethinking objects for 21st-century life. The collaboration shamelessly goes after a new generation of denim customers who have lives that would be unrecognizable to the gold rushers and miners jeans were originally made for.

Photo courtesy 3x1

Which makes a certain amount of sense: Everything else we own is calibrated for 2018, but jeans aren’t. To accommodate this new way of life, Doucet and 3x1 added a couple of features that, novel as they are, seem like they can only be appreciated by the most tech-conscious among us.

Take the coin pocket, for example—that little pocket you’ve probably used to store more drugs than coins. 3x1 stretched the pocket out to fit a credit card, then lined the compartment with RFID-blocking fabric to thwart potential hackers. Other additions follow the same line of thinking: a pocket lined with a microfiber that wipes phones clean, and a reflective 3M strip that reveals itself when the jeans are cuffed. The strip is meant to keep walking or biking commuters safe at night. Of course, some tweaks are a little less tech-forward: The jeans also have a bit of stretch in them, “since most people are sitting today,” says 3x1 founder Scott Morrison. “We're definitely doing a lot more stationary things behind a computer.”

Just as interesting as what was added to the jeans is what was taken away. Morrison points to rivets—which were crucial for reinforcing jeans in the past—as something that just isn’t necessary anymore, thanks to developments in stitching technology. “The stuff that's decorative just doesn't really matter anymore,” he says. “It's not to say I don't like rivets, because of course that's a nice feature, but it just wasn't applicable here.” To create a true 21st-century jean, you have to do away with tradition. “I have this well-informed appreciation of history and denim's place specifically in American history, but I don't feel the trappings of having to retell that story when we make a pair of jeans,” Morrison says. The problem is many people, particularly guys, still have a deep appreciation for aspects of our clothing that are informed by tradition, even if they have no bearing on modern life.

Photo courtesy 3x1

Do we still need functional buttons on suit jacket sleeves—known as surgeon’s cuffs, because they were worn by military doctors who needed to roll their sleeves up when treating patients? No! Do those buttons have an interesting history that men still pay more for? Yes! The same is true for jeans. It’s a lot cooler to point to the rivets on a pair of jeans and talk about how they were needed to make the denim strong enough for a hard day’s labor than to get into how your pockets have microfiber that makes your phone screen clean and shiny so you can better see tweets. Men tend to eat stuff like provenance up, and not just when buying clothes: Storytelling bumps up the value of items like no-longer-in-production cars, watches formerly owned by celebrities, and liquor that’s made in small batches by one quality-obsessed recluse. A large portion of the #menswear era in the late aughts was fueled by guys’ obsession with history and authenticity. So, in that way, discarding the rivets feels almost contentious—and potentially bad business.