The story behind Copper

Take your mouse for a walk.
Stroll along this site and feast
on the classic features of the
Levi's® Copper™ Jeans - blown up for you. If you're up for it, you can also download your own pair of
Levi's® Copper™ Jeans, bury a message for a friend, and search for loose Copper nuggets to know intriguing facts about Copper.
Have a good wander.




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directions

Bury messages in Levi's® soil. You can choose to post public messages for all to savor, or bury private notes for your selected friends to uncover.
 
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Walk the talk and strut your very own pair of Levi's® Copper™ Jeans. Just choose your size, print out the jeans and you
can see how you’d look in a pair of
Levi's® Copper™ Jeans. And if you’re up for it, post pictures of you dressed in your printed-out jeans - complete with your personal take on the rest of the outfit.
 
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The Statue of Liberty is covered with more than 200,000 pounds of Copper sheeting.
Copper is man’s oldest metal, dating back more than 10,000 years
One of the Dead Sea Scrolls found in Israel is made of Copper instead of animal skins. The scroll contains clues to a still undiscovered treasure.
Copper is the only metal other than gold that has natural color. Other metals are either gray or white.
Pennies today contain only 2.5% Copper because the value of a coin cannot be more than the cost to make it.
Copper tubing was found in the Pyramid of Cheops in Egypt, and they were still in serviceable condition after more than 5,000 years.
Copper was associated with the Greek goddess Aphrodite in mythology and alchemy, owing to its lustrous beauty and its ancient use in producing mirrors.
Copper is the standard benchmark for electrical conductivity. It conducts electrical current better than any other metal except silver.
10,000 years ago, cave dwellers used Copper axes as tools for survival. Today, surgeons save lives and precious blood by using Copper-clad scalpels.
Copper cookware is regarded as the best by chefs around the world because of its advantages in high heat transfer (the highest of any material used in cooking) and uniform heating (no hot spots).

How It All Started
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