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What to Wear When It’s Too Hot for Jeans
Every summer, denim guys start looking for lighter jeans. We look at denim weight, weave, fabric breathability, even washed options, and all the variables that might make jeans easier to wear when the temperature rises
But sometimes, the obvious warm-weather alternative to jeans isn’t actually jeans. It’s chinos.

A good pair of chinos solves many of the same problems you try to solve with lightweight denim. They’re lighter, easy to wear, and naturally more relaxed. They still work with the same shirts, sneakers, and T-shirts—but they bring a different shape and feel.
Tellason’s wide-leg chino could be what you’re looking for. More room, lighter fabric, same denim-friendly wardrobe.
Why Tellason Made a Wider Chino
The San Francisco brand already moved toward roomier silhouettes with the Fredy fit, which was right on time when it launched. According to co-founder Tony Patella, the success of both the Fredy jeans and Tellason’s wide-leg fatigue pants told them that a wide-leg chino would likely be well received too.

That matters because Tellason has always been a jeans brand first. But over the years, the brand has built a wider jeanswear wardrobe: shirts, fatigues, chinos, jackets, and recently also sneakers—the kind of pieces that make sense next to proper jeans.
Wide-leg chinos fit into that world. It’s not Tellason suddenly becoming a fashion-trouser brand. It’s more like the brand recognising that what feels classic can still move.
What Chinos Do Better Than Jeans
The point isn’t that chinos replace jeans. They do something different.
Chinos wear differently from jeans. Without those patch pockets, the yoke, and that heavy denim seams, they look cleaner and feel more … trouser-like, even when the fit has plenty of room.



Tellason’s wide-leg chino gives you a 9 oz. cotton twill, a roomier leg, and a shape that feels more relaxed than their existing tapered and straight-leg chinos.
Tony explains that the wide-leg chino is wider throughout the hips, seat, and legs. The difference between the straight and wide fits is bigger than the difference between Tellason’s tapered and straight chinos, which share the same waist-to-knee measurements.
It’s still simple. Still khaki. Still easy to understand (and wear). But it gives denim guys another option when jeans feel like too much.
Big Pants, Not a Big Statement
On the product page, Tellason references the Madness song Baggy Trousers, punk, ska, and reggae. But the styling keeps it simple: pink oxford shirt, beat-up Vans slip-ons (skate editions), wide khaki chinos.
It doesn’t look like workwear costume. It doesn’t look like fashion styling. It looks relaxed, lived-in, and easy. Very Tellason.


Tony says those music and subculture references didn’t necessarily shape the fit itself. The military influence is more direct in the details, including the button fly and lined waistband.
That pink oxford is Tellason too. I’ve also covered why their oxford shirt belongs in a denimhead’s wardrobe in this review.
Why ‘Made in Italy’ Matters
Tellason’s tapered and straight-leg chinos are built around a different setup: Japanese fabric, San Francisco production.
The wide-leg chino shifts both fabric and production to Italy. That shouldn’t be treated as a side note, but it also shouldn’t be over-romanticised.
According to Tony, the Japanese twill used for the existing chinos is limited in availability, so they decided to keep that fabric for those products. The Italian twill is also nicely woven, and importantly, less difficult to get a hold of for them.
That gives the wide-leg chino its own identity inside the lineup. Same category, same basic idea, but a different fabric, production setup, and fit.
Who These Chinos Make Sense For
These are for guys who love jeans, but don’t always want to wear jeans. Especially in summer.
They’re for someone who wants something lighter than denim, more room than a slim chino, a cleaner silhouette than jeans, and a pant that still works with denim-world staples.


There used to be an assumption that wide-leg pants were mainly for bigger guys who truly needed the extra space. Tony doesn’t see it that way anymore. Even Pete, who Tony describes as a “skinny bloke,” is wearing Fredy jeans now.
As Tony puts it, “There is literally room for everyone with these fits.” Pun intended, of course.
The Case for Chinos
You can spend years looking for the perfect summer jeans. Sometimes that makes sense. But sometimes the better answer is not another pair of jeans. It’s a good pair of chinos.
Tellason’s wide-leg chino feels like that kind of answer: lighter, roomier, classic, and easy to wear with the clothes you already own.
Want More About Tellason? Start With These:
Tellason Jeans Guides – A full guide to Tellason’s jeans lineup, including which fit to choose and what to expect from the denim.
Tellason’s Oxford Shirt – Why this menswear classic belongs in every denimhead’s wardrobe.
Five Iconic Tellason Pieces – Standout garments from the brand, including jeans, shirts, and outerwear.
Tellason’s Fredy Fit Reviewed – An in-depth look at the brand’s wider-leg jean and why the fit works.
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Hi, I’m Thomas, founder of Denimhunters. If you liked this article, you should check out the DH Weekly. It’s my weekly column and newsletter that I publish every Friday, with new guides, deals, and things worth paying attention to.
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