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Abercrombie and Fitch isn’t the only store that doesn’t want ‘larger people’

9 May

A big hoo-ha rolling around amongst friends on Facebook is a reminder of a 2006 tone-deaf pronouncement re women larger than size 10 from Abercrombie & Fitch CEO Mike Jeffries that was recently reiterated by Robin Lewis, co-author of The New Rules of Retail, who told Business Insider 

“He doesn’t want larger people shopping in his store, he wants thin and beautiful people,” Lewis told Business Insider. “He doesn’t want his core customers to see people who aren’t as hot as them wearing his clothing. People who wear his clothing should feel like they’re one of the ‘cool kids.’” 

Yep, that pretty well paraphrases Jeffries’ comments to Salon magazine in 2006….no fat chicks

But this really isn’t a surprise to someone like me, who wears between a 14 and 16 (sometimes a 12) and repeatedly finds that she cannot purchase a darned thing from trendy retailers like French Connection and All Saints, and that many designer shops , such as Tory Burch, don’t cater to her size either.

At least the surgically altered Jeffries’ is open and honest about his retailing philosophy.

Not to mention that when I worked at V.S., they had decided to phase out bra sizes over a 38D from the stores, and made them available only online.

For a culture that seems to be obsessed with large breasted women, it’s amazing that we aren’t necessarily wanted in stores unless we are of the surgically augmented variety, with tiny bodies and oversized implants a la  Heidi Montag (who, according to the tabloids now “regrets” having size 32G breasts. yeah, right.)

Over and over, and supposedly, there are retail studies that show the average American woman is somewhere around a 14.  Or a 12, if adjusted for vanity sizing.  This is often considered “plus size.”  However, the true retail Plus Size, or Women’s size 14 really does not fit certain women who are that size.   Me, for instance, when I try to buy a plus size 14, it may fit well around my breasts, but will be HUGE throughout the body of the garment, and much longer than I need it to be.  A size 14, or, in some cases a 12, or a Large, in the Misses’ department (the average height woman) might fit somewhat better in the waist, but still be larger in the hip and length than I want it to be.  Pants are a total “forget it” as the rise is way too long and I end up with droopy crotch and saggy butt.  My best pants size is a 14 petite because of the hip, rise and length, although a 14, 16, or XL petite top is hit or miss–usually they are too short even if they fit across the chest.

Apparently, we are supposed to be getting our clothing altered.  But who has the time and money for alterations?  Who wants to take a crummy pair of $35 or $40 pants and pay an additional $30 or $40 to have them altered so that they fit properly with no droopy crotch, no saggy butt, and not dragging on the floor?

But back to the bit about retailers’ wanting only the “cool kids” in their stores.  Jeffries says that he doesn’t want Abercrombie to be a “vanilla” store that appeals to everybody.  Honestly, he really doesn’t have to limit his sizes for that to happen.  There are a lot of people who wouldn’t shop in his stores, primarily because of the steep price point for Chinese sweat shop garments.    Still, Jeffries’ thinking is about as ironic as a culture that likes size 2 women with unnatural 32G chests.  It turns out that in the average shopping mall, the majority of the stores are aimed at an under 30 customer because it is perceived that an under 30 customer will have money to spend on themselves, whereas the over 30 customer is shopping for family.

Between the negative attitudes of retailers about sizes over 10, and the under 30 target demographic of most mall retailers, is it any wonder that shoppers are flocking to online outlets, where they do not have to face rack upon rack of nothing worth purchasing.

 

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Spring-Summer 2013 Fashion Trend: Tyrrany of the Florals!

16 Apr

OMG!  THEY’RE EVERYWHERE!!!

Florals.  I have a hate/love relationship with florals.  More often, it’s been hate.  Rarely have I found a floral pattern that I’ve liked, and most make me either look or feel like an old lady.  But the ubiquity of florals for this spring-summer fashion season is leaving me little choice but to engage in the wearing of *some* florals.

Although I must admit that last year I picked up a rather nice LC Lauren Conrad brand floral top with ruffles that still looks very nice.  It’s the colors (a lavender-gray with coral-pink flowers.)  So I imagine if I find some other subtle florals, it might not be such a bad thing to wear florals.  Take this Simply Vera Vera Wang dress from Kohl’s

Simply Vera Vera Wang High-Low Floral dress

I love the way that the floral pattern moves from small to large, with a very pretty peach background (although peach is not a great color on me–I still like it.)  To me, this is floral without being FLORAL–if you know what I mean.  And the subtle high-low hem adds a lovely trendy touch that could be done away with next year if the high-low thing goes out of style….

Still, though, I’m having a big problem with floral pants–specifically floral jeans.  No, they’re not happening on me.  They were around last year, too, and they will always and forever remind me of the 1980′s, when I didn’t wear them either.  I Floral Cropped pants from Cachealso will not wear floral printed pajama style pants.  On me, pajama style pants, even with a close-fitting top, don’t quite cut it.  They look  just a bit too casual.  Plus I look like someone squashed a tall person into a short one.  Not good.  I’m also not impressed with floral shorts–although slightly more inclined to wear them than floral jeans.   However, a nice floral pant, in a modern cut with straight legs–not skinny , not that terrible boxy cut, high-water looking deals, or those old-style tapered cut pants,  are on trend and work better than floral jeans (for some of us.  This pair of floral cropped pants from Cache.com would suit me fine.

 

Floral skirts, however, are more my speed:  like this one, an online exclusive  from Ann Taylor Loft Floral Vines Skirt from Loft are great to mix with a bunch of solid-color tops (the print reminds me of Indian textiles.)  Or this Mossimo women's zippered pencil skirt from Targetgorgeous pencil skirt from Mossimo–another online exclusive from Target.  Both patterns are great–one is more classic, the other more trendy-modern, but both would suit my wardrobe and fit me perfectly.

So, like with any trend, pick your pieces according to what would work for you, not against you.  If, like me, the idea of floral jeans just makes you itch, don’t do it.  Or go for a floral pant is a modern cut.   That’s the thing with florals: watch the cut of your pants, or the style of your skirt.  If it’s something you remember from your wardrobe past, you  might want to avoid it at all costs in favor of something a bit more up to date.  Unless you are going strictly and truly vintage, don’t go for something that looks like you picked it up from the discount rack at the Salvation Army or Goodwill–you will only end up looking like someone who hadn’t weeded out their closet since sometime in 1990.  And when you *are* older, there’s nothing that makes you look older than dated styles of clothing!

 

Now on View: The magnificent wardrobe of Frida Kahlo

10 Apr

If you find yourself travelling to Mexico City between now and November 22, 2013, you must plan a visit to the Museo Frida Kahlo  check out the most fascinating first exhibition of Frida Kahlo’s wardrobe, on display for the first time in 60 years….

Why did it take so long to bring Kahlo’s collection of corsets, long skirts, and more to light?  When she died, husband Diego Rivera locked up her possessions for 15 years.  After Rivera passed away, colleague and compadre Dolores Olmedo kept everything securely tucked away for the future.  Olmedo passed in 2004, and since then every piece has been carefully examined and curated in anticipation of this exhibit.

Kahlo in a body cast she painted while on her back recovering from surgery

Kahlo in a body cast she painted while on her back recovering from surgery

It is said that many of the clothes still carry the scent of Kahlo’s perfume and cigarettes, some even stained…..

This is an amazing collection that embodies the life of a most amazing woman and artist, who lived her truth and made no apologies.  On a personal note, the more I find that the more I explore the life of Frida Kahlo, the more I find that the world is never all that kind to women who live their truth, that it is difficult, esp. when that truth is at odds with mores and customs.  But it is always better to live one’s truth than to suffer in society’s straightjacket….

For me, that’s the lesson  I learn from her and the courage she displayed throughout her lifetime.

(H/T to MessyNessyChic for the discovery of this exhibit.)

JCP axes CEO Ron Johnson: a consumer analysis of JCP’s six big branding mistakes

9 Apr

Stunning news today that JC Penney CEO Ron Johnson–former Apple Store retail whiz and former Target merch

JC Penney is one of the three department store...

JC Penney is one of the three department stores at the mall. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

executive–has been fired after causing a roughly 50 percent drop in JCP share price over the relatively short length of his tenure as CEO.   There’s so much, much more to this than just the drop in share price.  It’s also the purported damage that Johnson may have done to the brand with his innovative strategies that certainly did not fit the needs nor wants of the consumer.

Now, I was pretty sanguine about Johnson taking the helm of JCP, hoping that the brand would fill the gap left by Sears (which has become nothing more than a Land’s End store combined with an upscale K-Mart.   K-Mart now specializes in a particular kind of ghettowear typified by the Sofia Vergara collection….but I digress….)  I’d hoped they would give some slightly hipper, somewhat better quality clothing than I could find at Target or Kohl’s.  Yet Johnson made some key missteps that left consumers confused about pricing and about who among the various consumer groups JCP sought to lure.  Here are in, no particular order (except for the first mistake) are six consumer-observered ways that Johnson mucked up:

First Mistake: getting rid of coupons nixes our dopamine high.   Johnson completely forgot that to the American Consumer, a coupon is like bargaining.   Since we can’t haggle with merchants, we like them to give us a percentage off.  The American Consumer Sentiment is that the price on the tag is always too high and that the coupon is the vehicle by which we will get the fair price.   If we find a missing button, or a lipstick stain, or a ripped hem, we ask for an additional 10 percent off–and usually get it.  Register jockeys are allowed to give that much in percentage off for damages.   Like Pavlov’s Dogs, we salivate when the coupons come in the mail or email, and studies have shown we get a dopamine boost from getting that coupon deal.  With his “fair and square” pricing scheme, Johnson took away the dopamine high we get from shopping.  Bad, Ron Johnson! Bad! Bad!

Second Mistake: spurning the Alfred Dunner Crowd, neglecting Boomers & Gen X  Johnson wanted to court the next generation of retail shopper into the store, so he set up Sephora outlets, brought in brands like Mango and Buffalo jeans.   But that did not make the Alfred Dunner retiree crowd happy.  Some pundits have been saying that it was the Boomers that Johnson let down–but it’s really the Alfred Dunner crowd who relied on JC Penney for their wardrobe staples and drastically slashed grandbaby and teen clothes.  By courting the young hipster demographic, Johnson left out the Boomers, Gap-gen (those too young for Woodstock/Viet Nam and too old for tattoos) as well as Gen Xers (who now have their own families.)  The brands that are now being hyped by JCP–such as Cosabella and Pearl Georgina Chapman of  Marchesa, and others–are more towards the customer who will shop the I <3 Ronson line, even though they are being marketed as “women’s” clothing.  This is another Target-like strategy that alienates anyone over the age of 21.

Third Mistake:  Replicating Target in their marketing collateral  I hadn’t realized that Johnson was a Target exec because most of the early press around Johnson emphasized his stellar role with Apple.   But the problem with Johnson was his strong ties to Target’s re-branding and re-launch as a cool place to buy staple clothing and some stylish housewares.  He even brought in Michael Francis, the dude who was responsible for Target’s mega-successful whimsical family ads!! (Francis left after 8 disastrous months)  I remember how friends and I sat and looked at the ads and scratched our heads, wondering if these ads were all part of a new Target campaign–since Target had just made some big changes in their flagship stores to include groceries and designer collaborations– or if something else was brewing .  It took awhile for it to register that the ads were for a revamped JC Penney.  That lag-time in ad recognition did not help.

Fourth Mistake:  The Martha Stewart collaboration and subsequent lawsuit which is still unresolved.  Not that a collaboration with Martha is a bad thing.  It’s just that with Martha, one has to check everything twice, with an attorney, to make sure there’s no misunderstandings in the fine print.  Martha made the jump from K-Mart to Macy’s pretty smoothly (after she could see K-Mart going to the ghetto dogs,) but she hasn’t been happy with Macy’s.  I can’t blame her.  Her goods are treated like they are second-class, tucked behind other brands such as Ralph Lauren, Kitchen Aide, and Fiestaware.  She hasn’t been the stand-out at Macy’s, and JCP offered her the shop-within-a-shop idea that they’d pulled off with Sephora.  JCP did not, however, bank on Macy’s reading the fine print and perhaps re-interpreting it to their benefit.  The lawsuit has cost JCP dearly in money they don’t have to spend on lawsuits that might end up being “frivolous.”

Fifth Mistake:  Target-like design collaborations   I recently received an email from JCP announcing the launch of collaborations with Michael Graves and Jonathan Adler’s Happy Chic.  Not impressive for a number of reasons other than that these are design collaborations iterative of those Target had with the same designers.  While we won’t be able to purchase teakettles with little birds on them, or super cool luggage shaped like cello cases (both designed by Graves.  I have the suitcase) at JCP, we will get some other Graves designed housewares that resemble those from Target.  And might be just as cheaply made as those at Target.  Not all of Graves’ goods were good nor durable and turned out to be wastes of money.  As for Adler’s design esthetic:  can well call it American Teen-Ager?  I’m not impressed with the doo-dads, geegaws and various knickknacks that are being trotted out.  Target has cut back on the tchochkies  probably because most people are watching their pennies and might have shelves full of bric-a-brac already.  I don’t envision Adler’s stuff selling all that well.

Sixth Mistake:  Minimizing the brands that worked   What happened to Nicole Miller?  and Bisou-Bisou?  and Jones New York?   or the A.N.A. line?  These were great brands that offered very nice crossover career-wear for the 30-55 age group.  The Worthington and St. John’s Bay lines were also pushed to the side.  SJB offered very nice, better quality staples (tees, jeans, sweaters) than Target, K-Mart or Sears.  Worthington offered great wardrobe builders for anyone working the all-black retail or other service industry jobs.   But if part of the strategy was to move away from Jobwear and Casualwear,  what about the slightly upper-scale brands?  The only one that got its own shop was Liz Claiborne, and not a lot of the LC pieces seem all that exciting (I haven’t purchased any.)  Also, JCP seems to be doing away with petites and talls.  Bad, bad move.  Not everyone can afford to take a $40 pair of Joe Fresh trousers and have them altered–which is what’s needed for a petite such as myself.  JCP will lose me as a loyal customer if the only stuff I can find in the petites section are Alfred Dunners.

Most retailers are struggling to get that middle bracket of consumers–those 30-55 or 60–back into stores.  This demo has been neglected for quite a while, and has taken to shopping at specialty retailers like Chico’s or Ann Taylor Loft, or online.  This middle bracket also likes coupons because they’ve grown up with them (and are pretty well conditioned to getting them.)  Ron Johnson did very little to court this group, did a lot to alienate the retirees, and went after the young folks with a half-assed, iterative marketing strategy that completely backfired.   I liked shopping in the stores, but I enjoy taking my time–lots of my peers don’t have that kind of time, and can only go by what they are seeing in ads and getting in the mail.  Johnson may have been successful with Apple–it was one line of products that already had a strong brand and a carved market niche.   Adding up all the mistakes made at JCP, including hiring Michael Francis,  it appears that Johnson was trying to turn JCP into Target Redux.

Consumers didn’t need another Target–and that became evident with every step that Johnson took to change JCP.  We need a fresh JCP, with new styles that walk somewhere between the classic and the trendy,  and new designs that are more than dorm-style patterns and boastful bric-a-brac.  We need our weekly dopamine fix with “deals” that don’t scream “fire sale” but do give us the price we believe is “fair and square.”  So what if that price comes in a circular on a Wednesday with a coupon only good on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.  We are used to this pattern, and with over-scheduled kids and two working parents, we don’t have time to allocate to any new pricing schemes.

The JCP board has announced it will be bringing back former CEO Mike Ullman, who was resoundingly criticized by activist board member William Ackman. If anything, this may stop the hemorrhaging for now. Over the long haul though, JCP is going to have to come up with something that will lure the mommy and middle customers away from online and back into the stores, while stimulating the younger generation. This is a big, big job that will require someone who can think both old and new simultaneously. I don’t know if there’s that kind of creativity in the C-suite these days, but I will be following this next move on the part of JCP just as closely as I did the tenure of Ron Johnson. It’s probably the most exciting adventure story in retail these days.

Melissa McCarthy demonstrates the perils of too-high high heels

9 Apr

Recently, I gave up wearing anything over a 4-inch heel.  And with good reason.  Said reason (or reasons) are aptly demonstrated by Melissa McCarthy in the opening monologue for this past week’s Saturday Night Live…..

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