Dickies and Harley-Davidson launch rugged Built to Outlast capsule
Dickies and Harley-Davidson’s second capsule stretches from a $30 beanie to a $160 denim jacket, with 14 oz. denim and recycled twill built for real wear.

Dickies and Harley-Davidson are leaning harder into utility than nostalgia with Built to Outlast, a second limited-edition capsule that treats blue-collar Americana as more than a logo exercise. The collection went live with 33 products on Harley-Davidson’s shop, priced from a $30 knit beanie to a $160 Boxy Denim Jacket, and it pushes the partnership’s rough-edged formula into pieces that look ready for the street, the garage, and the ride home.
The strongest case for the drop is the fabric story. The Quilted Lined Eisenhower Jacket uses a heavyweight recycled twill blend with recycled polyester taffeta lining and a water-repellent finish, which gives the familiar boxy work jacket a more protective, weather-minded hand. The Denim Carpenter Pant, cut from 14 oz. cotton denim, has the kind of heft shoppers can actually feel before they ever put it on, while the Boxy Denim Jacket, also in 14 oz. cotton denim with polyester tricot lining, reads as the most overtly fashion-forward layer in the lineup. At $95 for the carpenter pants and $160 for the jacket, these are not throwaway novelty prices, but they are still in line with premium heritage workwear that promises longevity instead of trend-cycle burn.

That durability message is the point. Dickies has built its name on durability since 1922, and Harley-Davidson has spent decades turning American motoring into a style language that fashion keeps borrowing from. What makes Built to Outlast feel sharper than a standard heritage collaboration is that it does not stop at moto graphics or a single logo swap. It offers a full range of wearable staples, including a Denim Vest at $120, heritage tees, and tanks that give the collection a lower-stakes entry point for people who want the attitude without going head-to-toe in denim.

For everyday styling mileage, the carpenter pant and the Eisenhower jacket are the easiest buys. The pants can anchor a white tee, a worn sweatshirt, or a leather boot without looking costume-y. The jacket has enough structure to sit over a hoodie, yet the recycled twill and taffeta lining keep it from feeling precious. The boxy denim jacket is the bolder choice, best worn with simple black trousers or matching denim to avoid tipping into cosplay. The vest is the most niche, but layered over a ribbed tank or faded tee, it hits the sweet spot between biker club uniform and city uniform.

This is the sophomore release after Born to Be Alive, the first Dickies x Harley-Davidson capsule announced in March 2025, which reworked classic workwear silhouettes with a bold moto edge and later drew a release-party crowd that stretched from motorcycle and action sports to television, fashion, and music. Built to Outlast pushes that reach further, but the smarter story is still the same: in a market tired of disposable hype, clothes that promise abrasion, weight, and repeat wear are the ones that still feel worth talking about.
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