This
piece ran in Sunday’s Washington Post Opinion section, and it sparked a
veritable storm of comments. Because it points out a fact of contemporary life
that is blindingly obvious to every woman over the age of 30: the ready-to-wear
clothes we’re being offered everywhere from Banana Republic to Ann Taylor are
ugly, over-priced, shoddy and not designed for actual female body shapes. And
the buying public are therefore declining to pay good money for schmattas that
pill, rip, shrink, fade and otherwise fail to fulfill their function.
Ergo
the more than 2000 responses from WaPo readers who do not want to wear
low-riding jeans, transparent knit off-the-shoulder or sleeveless tops,
mini-skirts or other garments that make you look like you’re on the game.
Especially when worn with the four-inch heels that seem inescapable in either
shoes or boots.
(Seriously:
I get the feeling that the fashion industry thinks that the only women with
money to spend on clothes are stick insects with the sophistication of Hannah
Montana. What makes me really uncomfortable about this is that “the look” is decidedly
sexualized, like tweens on parade on websites that I don’t really want to think
about.)
Sales
are down noticeably in these retailers, but evidently not enough to get them to
start asking what women actually do want, which is an interesting business
model. Because what they want are clothes that fit a variety of body types (some
of which encompass curves), in colors that flatter and realistic sizes, and
that don’t start falling apart the moment you walk out of the store. Quelle idée!
Here’s
une autre idée: the retailers might
consider the buyer experience. Because that, too, is clearly targeted at the
younger millennial. You walk into any store in a mall, from Forever 21 to Nordstrom,
and ear-damagingly loud music of some indeterminate origin assails you. It’s
basically screaming (um): “We don’t want your money! Go away! You can’t handle
the hipness!” When Nordstrom replaced their live piano with ersatz head-banging
crap throughout the store, I recognized it as a sign of the End Days. So I just
don’t go in there.
Then
there’s the third-world feeling of shabbiness you get when you walk into a
store with jumbled merchandise on tables and overstuffed racks, the entirely predictable
outcome of corporate stinginess in staffing. A friend of mine in the Valley
They Call Silicon used to pick up some extra cash working at Macy’s in the
Stanford Mall during the holidays. Stanford Mall draws upscale shoppers, but
that Macy’s looks like your average Kohl’s: clothes littering the sales floor (not just the dressing
rooms), racks so crammed you can’t pull something out…ugh. Beth had a
completely Sisyphean task of trying to make things neat, because she was the
only one covering several departments.
And
it’s not limited to that one store. I was in the Macy’s in Pentagon City at the
weekend, with a 25% discount card. Between the fashion offerings and the
slightly grody environment, I could not get out of there fast enough. I handed
off my discount card to a trio of British tourists coming in as I was leaving.
Also—the
industry’s humiliating approach to sizing might be worth a revisit. Marilyn
Monroe was a size 12. These days retailers disdain to carry any double-digit
sizes, even though it’s not a very well-kept secret that the American
population is expanding in waistline as well as numbers. Why would clothing
manufacturers and retailers basically fat-shame women by telling them that if
they want something above a 10, they need to take their money and go online?
Moreover—these
days a Size [whatever] is not a Size [whatever] across the board. Even from a single
manufacturer, since the label goes on hundreds of items that actually come from
factories wherever labor is cheapest, and China, Mexico, Ghana, Vietnam,
Bangladesh and other places are not standardizing cutting templates. Nor, let
it be noted, are the label-owners interested in paying for standardizing, since
every nickel they shell out means that much less profit.
This
means that trying to buy anything without trying it on first is a crapshoot
with the odds decidedly not in your favor. Who has the kind of time to burn
that allows you to take three sizes of everything into the dressing room until
you hit lucky? Or to return items bought online in the vain hope that your
guess on size would be right?
When
I posted the WaPo story on Facebook someone said, “That’s why Goodwill is the
way to go.” Well, except that thrift and consignment stores are hit and miss: Yes,
you can find some good quality things, but the retail gods must be smiling
directly upon you for you to strike while there’s something you like in your
size. Plus, when you factor in their usually limited hours, if you’re working a
9-5 M-F gig, you only effectively have Saturday to make the rounds of
second-hand stores. I, for one, don’t have that kind of energy or time.
If
any retailers or manufacturers were reading the comments to the WaPo piece, I
hope they were wearing protective eye gear, because there were floods of
caustic words flowing. I also hope they take on board some of the sentiments:
Holy crap, people: don’t treat the money-wielding market like we should be
ashamed to want apparel that suits us, whatever we look like. This is pretty
basic market awareness; think you can manage that?
Oh, and for the love of God, would you give us pockets?
Oh, and for the love of God, would you give us pockets?
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