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Workwear is more than just clothing; it’s a reflection of the times, embodying the professions and personalities that shaped its evolution.

From the wide open plains to bustling industrial hubs, these styles have been the reliable uniform of workers who needed clothing that could—like their wearers—endure the rigors of the day and come back ready for more.

Model wearing The Shop Shirt in Coal Chipped Canvas

That “function-first” design ethos survives today in our rugged Chipped Canvas line. Drawing on the most iconic elements of heritage workwear—like double-knee pants and canvas jackets—these styles are built to take no days off, and pick up character with every job done.

What is Chipped Canvas?

It’s taken years of tweaks and refinements, setbacks, and successes to arrive at a workwear fabric that checks all of our boxes. We call the fruits of our labor Chipped Canvas. It’s a heavyweight 100% organic cotton canvas that’s double-dyed for rich color and stone-washed for a perfectly worn-in feel right from the start.

Model wearing The Shop Shirt in Stone Chipped Canvas

Our Chipped Canvas Assortment

From durable chore pants to overbuilt outerwear, our Chipped Canvas workwear pays tasteful homage to the classics of yesteryear while offering the craftsmanship and practicality you need to meet the demands of the day, no matter what that looks like. Explore our rugged roster of workwear, and learn more about how to style these pieces on our Workwear Guide.

The Chore Pant in Coal Chipped Canvas

Shop Chipped Canvas

Interested to learn more about our other fabrics? Check out the rest of our Fabric Stories:

editorial image of fisherman on a boat
September 23, 2025

We Wear the Sea

If you trace modern menswear back to its sources, you keep hitting water. Long before “heritage” became a mood board term, seafarers and dock crews were solving real problems with clothing: cut the wind, shed the spray, move without snagging, survive the day.

Read more
Close up of indigo sashiko fabric
August 15, 2025

Common Thread: A History of Indigo

For centuries, indigo has carried the marks, fades, and wear of honest work. Whether stamped into the folds of a French bleu de travail chore jacket, the weather-softened cotton of Japan’s Edo-period laborers, or the durable denim and chambray of American tradesmen, the story remains consistent: blue is the color of toil.

Read more
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