Tomorrow is Denim Day, created after a 1998 court overturned a sexual assault conviction because the survivor wore tight jeans. Wearing denim says clothing is never consent, we believe survivors, and we’re ending sexual violence together. #VeraHouse #DenimDay Load image 59 KB
On Denim Day, we stand in solidarity w/ survivors of sexual violence & challenge harmful myths about consent. Wear denim on 4/29 as a visible reminder that there is never an excuse for assault—& that we believe and support survivors. Post pics & tag #gccfn! #DenimDay Load image
Thank you @bronxbp for bringing us together to uplift Denim Day and honor the grassroots advocates educating our communities on the power of consent. Survivors are still facing barriers and it is our duty to bridge the gap—with resources and support, education, and real change. Load image 5 KB Load image Load image Load image Bronx Borough President Vanessa L. Gibson and 9 others
— Office of the Public Advocate Jumaane D. Williams (@nycpa) April 27, 2026
DENIM DAY CHALLENGE This Wednesday, April 29 We challenge YOU to wear denim & take a stand. Post it. Tag us. Use your voice. There is NO excuse and NEVER an invitation to rape or sexual assault. Stronger together crimesurvivors.org Load image
Two more New Yorkers died in a fire due to non code compliant fire doors which HPD doesnt know the standard for as they've not been trained.. Meanwhile are celebrating Denim Day.. WOW.. this is why we dont have nice things people.. this shit right Quote Office of the Public Advocate Jumaane D. Williams · 17h Thank you @bronxbp for bringing us together to uplift Denim Day and honor the grassroots advocates educating our communities on the power of consent. Survivors are still facing barriers and it is our duty to bridge the gap—with resources and support, education, and real change.
Wednesday is International Denim Day. Wear denim to spread awareness and share support. Join us for an event on the Drillfield to learn about resources, educational activities, and learn about myths surrounding sexual violence: April 29, Drillfield 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Load image 5 KB Load image 5 KB Load image 18 KB
Join us for Denim Day on April 29! Stand with survivors & challenge harmful myths about sexual violence. 11:15 a.m.–12:35 p.m. Main Quad Wear denim. Donate denim (drop off at Basic Needs). #DenimDay #SAAM #SupportSurvivors Load image
Denim Day seeks to protest sexual violence. This day aims to educate others about forms of sexual violence. It encourages everyone to wear and buy jeans as a sign of solidarity for survivors and victims. Denim Day was started in response to a sexual assault case in Italy. In 1992, the Italian Supreme Court overturned a conviction of rape with the reasoning being that because the jeans the victim was wearing were too tight, she must have consented. They assumed that the criminal would not be able to remove the woman’s jeans without her help. This sparked an outrage. Many protested the verdict by wearing jeans in solidarity. The verdict would later become known as the jeans alibi.
Denim Day was established in 1999 by the executive director of Peace Over Violence, Patti Occhiuzzo Giggans. It is observed annually on the last Wednesday of April.
Top 8 Facts for Denim Day in 2026
The origins of the movement date back to a 1998 ruling by the Italian Supreme Court, often referred to as the jeans alibi, where a rape conviction was overturned because the justices argued the victim's tight denim pants could only have been removed with her active assistance, thereby implying consent.
Enraged by the verdict, the women of the Italian Parliament staged a massive protest by wearing jeans to work the following day, a demonstration that eventually inspired the official launch of the first Denim Day in Los Angeles in 1999.
The campaign has grown into the longest-running sexual violence prevention and education effort in history, reaching more than 100 million individuals across all 50 U.S. states and over 100 countries during its first 25 years.
For the upcoming 2025 observance, organizers at Peace Over Violence have established the official theme as Use Your Voice to encourage global participants to speak out against victim-blaming and share personal stories or advocate for survivor-centered policies.
While the original 1998 case sparked the movement, the Italian Corte Suprema di Cassazione officially overturned the controversial precedent in 2008, declaring that the type of clothing a person wears can never be used to mitigate the crime of sexual assault.
Notable artistic contributions to the cause include the song Never Said Yes by musical artist and spokesperson Maya Jupiter, which was specifically created to challenge rape culture and support the annual protest.
Participation in the event has expanded to include high-profile institutions such as the U.S. Air Force Academy, where cadets swap their operational camouflage for denim to align with the Academy's Let’s Be Clear campaign.
Major fashion brands like GUESS have historically partnered with the movement to host large-scale press events, further solidifying the use of denim as a permanent international symbol of protest and solidarity.