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The Best Corduroy Pants Are Soft Yet Durable

Every corduroy pant worth considering right now, from the quintessential to the frivolous and everything in-between.

collage of three corduroy pants
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The cooler parts of the year might be the best to break in a brand new double-fried crispy pair of raw denim jeans, but why suffer? Instead, leave the crunchy bits to the dead leaves and dried trees and slip into something more comfortable. We're talking about a pair of velvety, ultra-soft corduroy pants.

Whether you want a pair for the durability, the rustic aesthetics or the touch, the feel of corduroy, now is the ideal time. We've put together the best options out there right now.

To learn more about our testing methodology and how we evaluate products, head here.

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      Best Overall Corduroy Pants: Flint and Tinder 365 Corduroy Pant
      Now 30% off
      Best Upgrade Corduroy Pants: Sid Mashburn Slim Straight 5-Pocket Pant
      Best Affordable Corduroy Pants: L.L. Bean Stretch Country Corduroy Pants
      Best Corduroy Pants to Wear with a Suit: Buck Mason Stretch Cord Ford Standard Pant
      Buck Mason
      Best Pleated Corduroy Pants: Alex Mill Standard Pleated Pant
      Alex Mill
      Best Drawstring Corduroy Pants: Wellen Corduroy Easy Pant
      Huckberry
      Now 55% off
      Best Corduroy Pants Under $100: Everlane The Straight Fit Corduroy Pant
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      Now 40% off
      Best Corduroy Pants for Summer: Outerknown Seventyseven Cord Utility Pants
      Outerknown
      Best Dressed-Up Corduroy Pants: Drake's Mid-Wale Corduroy Flat Front Trouser
      Best Corduroy Traveler Pants: Banana Republic Slim Spring Corduroy Pant
      Banana Republic
      Best Mall Buy Corduroy Pants: J.Crew 770 Straight-Fit Corduroy Pant
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      Best Everyday Corduroy Pants: Patagonia Organic Cotton Corduroy Jeans
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      History of Corduroy
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      Corduroy stems from ancient Egypt, in a small town near Cairo called Al-Fustat. Despite its signature ridged finish, corduroy was originally smooth. Then, it was a thick, sturdy fabric woven from a warp of linen and a weft of cotton. The result was a dense “pile” (like on a carpet), and in the intervening years since, this weave has yielded two types of commonly used materials: velvet and corduroy. As you probably know, the latter comes with a textured surface of long ridges, known as wales. As such there can be thick fat “wide wale” corduroy or more subtle, slimmer wale ones.

      Understanding Wales
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      It's common to see 14- or 16-wale corduroy. But what does "wale" even mean? 14-wale corduroy means there are 14 ridges per inch. The fewer ridges, the more durable the fabric. The more wales, the finer the fabric.

      When to Wear Corduroy Pants
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      They're ideal for nippy weather, thanks to the cords or "wales" woven into the fabric. Those are made by inserting yarns into the fabric from the backside. The yarns stand up through the right side of the fabric and are then shorn, resulting in hairy piles of cords (or velvet) on the surface. That does two things: the piles can trap heat better, making them great for cooler weather, and; it makes the fabric more durable.

      No wonder it's often been seen in winter workwear garments like chore coats and heavy pants. These piles can trap heat, making them ideal for colder months. "But that's it," Todd Snyder Chief Product Officer Alejandro Rhett says, unless it's a pair of corduroy shorts — like vintage OP corduroy shorts.

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      The Taylor Stitch Camp Pant, Photo: Taylor Stitch
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