How to Make Destroyed and Distressed Jeans
Make Your $10 Jeans Look like They Came from Abercrombie and Fitch
Supplies
1 pair of super-duper cheap plain dark blue jeans
1 gallon bleach
5 pots of black sludge-like coffee
1 old, torn up, no good towel
1 old, torn up, no good tennis shoe
a couple of bricks or rocks
big bucket
1 piece of sandpaper, any grade
1 gallon vinegar
Lots of patience and time
Instructions
Before you decide to distress a pair of blue jeans make sure that you won't ever want them again in case you make a mistake. If you don't have any in your closet that you are willing to ruin, pick up a pair at your local Goodwill store for a couple of dollars. Same goes for the tennis shoe. This MUST be a tennis shoe and not a boot, golf shoe, bowling shoe or high heel.
Set your washing machine on a small load and allow it to fill up with HOT water. Add 3 cups of bleach to the hot water and allow it to spin for 1 minute. The spinning will mix the bleach into the water evenly so that you won't have splotches on your jeans. Do not add laundry soap, just bleach.
Throw in the old towel, tennis shoe and pair of jeans. Allow these items to spin in the washer for 3 minutes. Turn off the washing machine and allow all items to soak in the washer in the bleach water overnight. The towel and tennis shoe are what gives your jeans that stonewashed look without actually putting stones in your washer. The more bleach you add and the longer you let them soak the lighter they will be. To determine how light you want them to be try soaking them in the bleach for a few hours at a time until you feel safe enough to soak them overnight. Soaking them overnight will make them very, very light colored no matter how dark they originally were.
The next morning allow the washing machine to finish going through all the cycles without doing anything extra to it and then remove items. Do not put the jeans in the dryer yet.
Pour one gallon of vinegar into a large bucket. I like to use one of those 5 gallon buckets that laundry soap comes in. Dunk the jeans in the vinegar and place rocks or bricks on top to help keep them from floating to the top. Allow jeans to sit in the vinegar for 2 days.
After two days wring jeans out with your hands and hang outside in the sun for 2 more days. It HAS to be sunny. Overcast skies won't work.
Once the jeans are nice and crusty and dry, brew 5 pots of coffee. You will want the coffee to be as black and bitter and strong as you can get it. I found a canister of very old coffee hiding in the back of my cabinets. I didn't bother to measure the scoops; I simply poured it into the basket and made coffee.
Dump the coffee into the same bucket you used for the vinegar but be sure you have dumped the vinegar out. Once you have 5 pots of coffee in the bucket add the jeans. Depending on how many cups of coffee your coffee maker brews increase or decrease the amount of pots until you have enough to completely soak a pair of jeans in. My coffee maker does 12 cups and I brewed 5 pots.
Again put the bricks or rocks on top of the jeans to keep them from floating to the top. Let the jeans sit in the coffee for one week. Go do other things and forget about them.
After one week hang the jeans to dry outside, in the sun for one day. Then put them in the washing machine along with the towel and tennis shoe and wash with laundry soap as normal.
Your jeans should now be a blue-ish-gray-brown color. To give them a destroyed look, dunk them back in the coffee and put them on. It will feel gross but it works. Go sit outside in your wet jeans and use the sandpaper to rough up the knees, butt, hems, pockets or any other areas where you want them to fray.
The repeated soaking in coffee, vinegar and bleach will weaken the threads of the denim allowing them to get that worn in feel and make distressing them with sandpaper easier.
Published by Kelly Spies
I'm just a chick with a lot to say about different things. I've been writing for most of my life and aspire to someday be a published novelist as well as content writer. View profile
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- Abercrombie and Fitch uses a stonewashing technique to destroy their denim.
- Tennis shoes and an old towel do the same thing as stones.
- Vinegar and Bleach will lighten any dark colored jeans.





21 Comments
Post a CommentLoL for those of you defending me I thank you but there is no need. Money may get tight sometimes but I am far from unfortunate. I do like a good challenge though and I do enjoy doing things myself when I can. If I can make jeans look destroyed on my own then I'm all for it. I'd rather spend a few bucks on coffee and vinegar and bleach than giving it to A&F to give to their corporate CEO's to pocket. They have enough money, they aren't getting mine, not without a fight anyway.
God, you people that criticize this article are ridiculous. You shouldn't have to pay for A&F over-priced crap to those who are saying just buy their stuff and also all of the materials needed together aren't that expensive. I think this is creative and definitely a money saver.
Or you could do what I do and just wear them. I've got plenty of jeans that look "destroyed." They're just old.
sounds like an interesting idea and fun for a project, but the money spent on bleach, vinegar, coffee, water bill and whatever else you need to buy that you dont have, not to mention the time spent on it all...it would prolly be better to just buy a discounted pair at hollister or abercrombie
i think the dirt and minerals from the tennis shoe make the jeans look stone washed, and the towel is there to absorb the actually "dirt" all and all great article and can u guys please stop making fun of this lady she in unfortunate
Where the hell did you learn this from?
&& does it really work?
if we could afford that, we wouldn't be here now, reading this article.
I just can't figure out why adding a tennis shoe and an old towel would make the 'stone-washed' look. I will try it and then use a razor for the hollister 'superdestroyed' look. Thanks for taking the time to share.
this is a great article good job
Thanks for the great article! I'm going to have to try this out on a pair of my jeans. :)
Great article and a lot of work. Id rather just save up for what I wanted and just buy it.