Work pants are generally best kept, well, at your workplace, whether that’s a farm, a woodshop, an office centered around a sewing or drafting table or a bustling brewery. There, these styles serve a purpose: to protect your legs from dirt, grime, debris, paint, hot water, tough terrain and sharp edges. These heavy-duty types look out of place outside this context, where folks gravitate toward lightweight chinos and breathable jeans, not duck canvas dungarees or waxed tin cloth coveralls.
But there are a select few pants that cross over — that become go-tos for both work and everywhere else. For example, there’s Carhartt’s Double-Front Work Dungaree Pant, which is commonly called the B01. There’s also Dickies’s Loose Fit Double Knee Work Pant, workwear with less prominent reinforcements, hidden pockets and a kind of chino-like waist. We’ve previously compared the two head-to-head by weighing their differences and eventually settling on a winner. Our pick ended up being Carhartt’s iteration, because it supposedly withstood a chainsaw’s blade — we weren’t brave enough to try this ourselves but trusted an Amazon review with pictures to prove it — but also because they’re simply better for the price, a mere $50.
There are, however, plenty of high-end work pants, and none may be better than Filson’s Dry Tin Cloth Utility Pants, a durable unwaxed version of their iconic Tin Cloth Pants that eschews excess weight and weird add-ons in favor of a streamlined silhouette and a comfortable seat and knees.
Filson Dry Tin Cloth Utility Pants

Dry Tin Cloth Utility 5 Pocket Pants
Pros
- An elite workpant
- Works everywhere else, too
Cons
- Not water resistant