Ekusy Pants
The Ekusy Pants belong to a tradition of tailoring that understood confidence as a proportion problem. In the 1940s and into the 1950s, the men who dressed with genuine intention wore trousers with volume, with drape, with a break at the hem that moved when they moved. That silhouette was not an accident of the era. It was a deliberate position: that a trouser generous through the thigh and commanding at the hem communicated something about its wearer that no slim cut ever could. The avant garde tailors who built those trousers were solving for presence, and they solved it brilliantly.
Inverted box pleats run down each front leg, folding inward to create a pseudo-crease that gives the pant its shape at rest and its billow in motion. The pleat opens as the leg moves and falls back into line when it stops. It is the kind of construction detail that only makes sense once you are wearing it, and then makes complete sense. A J-fly zipper closes the front with an interior extension that keeps the hardware clean and protected behind the face of the pant. The leg tapers from a generous thigh into a wide hem, the proportion that lets the pleat structure do what it was designed to do. Deep slit pockets cut into each side seam carry without bulk. At the back, double welt pockets are finished with reinforcing stitching along each side, keeping the opening locked through years of use. The center back belt loop is shaped into a triangle, distributing the load of the belt across a wider base and holding the waistband in place with less bulk than any standard loop manages.
One per size was made. This is the complete run.
Fabric: Chambray.
Size & Fit: Model wears size Medium. Model Measurements: Height 6'2" / 188cm, Weight 175lbs / 79kg.