Monday, November 28, 2005

Black Friday Frenzy Starts in Dark

AURORA — The sun was still hours east of the horizon, the air temperature still blowing around somewhere between freezing and absolute zero.

And hard-core bargain hunters were ready to buy, buy, buy.

Like the holiday shopping season itself, the post-Thanksgiving day of stupendous sales seems to start earlier every year.

Most national retailers opened their doors at 5 a.m. or earlier Friday, luring customers out early with free gifts or drastic mark-downs on the season's hottest sellers.

At the Chicago Premium Outlets, on Aurora's Far East Side, the action began around 4:30.

It was an hour that could produce only one kind of shopper: serious, focused, and willing to stand in long lines under a cold moon.

And stand they did, clutching steaming Starbucks cups and checking the clocks on their cell phones.

Even as the crowd grew, the dark courtyards hung on to an air of quiet expectation.
The Christmas music hadn't even started yet; conversations were few and hushed.

Among the questions no one was asking was the plainest: Why do they do it?

The answer would have made notorious bank robber Willie Sutton proud.

"Because that's when the sale is," said Katie Jones, a Montgomery woman waiting to be one of the first into the mall's Sony store.

She said she was looking to walk out with an impossibly cheap plasma TV before pausing for a moment of guilt. "I'm sorry grandkids, I'm not shopping for you."

The lines were particularly long and slow moving outside stores like Diesel. The fashionable denim dealer was offering 50 percent off all merchandise from 5 to 7 a.m., and needed a door guard to make sure shoppers going in matched the number coming out.

Once inside, the quiet calm gave way as numb fingers thawed to join a frenzy of grabbing hands and ringing cash registers.

"It's definitely an experience," said Dave Worley. The St. Charles father never has taken part in the day-after-Thanksgiving shopping rush, nicknamed Black Friday in the retail industry as the day when stores see their bottom lines switch from the red ink of debt into the black of profit.

But as far as Worley was concerned, the blackness had more to do with the fact that he was standing around outside in the dark of night for the chance to drop a hundred bucks on a pair of jeans.

It was worth it, though, he said, as a way to spend some time with his 23-year-old daughter and 18-year-old son — and maybe recapture his "hipness."

"I wanted to stay in the mainstream," he laughed.

Mainstream or not, he certainly wasn't lacking for company. By sunrise, the mall was reasonably crowded.

By 9 a.m., even the Cold Stone Creamery was making sales.

"It looks like it's going to be a very good day," said the mall's general manager, Mark Sejd. "It looks like we're going to surpass last year."

Judging by the packed parking lots from the area's Wal-Marts and Best Buys to Westfield Fox Valley, the season seemed to be getting off to a good start everywhere.

This week, the National Retail Federation raised its predictions for holiday season revenues, saying the industry should rake in about $440 billion this November and December. That would be a growth of 6 percent over last year's holiday sales.

The NRF, an advocacy and analysis group for the retail industry, said it expects more than 130 million shoppers to hit the nation's stores this weekend.

"Many stores opened earlier than ever before, and retailers offered unbelievable sales ... to get people shopping," said NRF president Tracy Mullin.

"Lukewarm promotions on Black Friday won't get consumers out of bed, so most stores went all out this year to ensure that they were part of the holiday hype."

If Friday's crowds were a sign that the hype was working, the NRF's annual survey of consumer intentions was another. The average shopper, the survey found, plans to spend at least $820 on their holiday shopping.

Tuesday, November 22, 2005

How to do skinny
A very chic friend who works for a New York department store recently confided that she felt past her fashion sell-by date on a trip to London last month. While she was wearing boot-cut Seven jeans, she noticed that all the stylish young women in the capital had adopted skinny-legged denim. Suddenly, her flattering, leg-lengthening jeans were woefully out of date and all she wanted was a pair of Superfine's "Liberty" jeans, which were already a sell-out across the city.

Skinny jeans have had a meteoric rise thanks to the numerous paparazzi shots of denim-clad Scarlett Johansson and Kate Moss in them. Moss has been wearing drainpipes for at least a year, but recently her signature look of a striped top, grey skinny jeans and black ballet pumps has done more to popularise the new silhouette than any number of catwalk images.

Heels can make legs look slimmer

Not that this trend has very much to do with designers - it's the cool, premium denim labels that have introduced the new styles. Anna Garner, head of fashion at Selfridges, believes it's a look that has come from the streets, too. "London girls have really put this look together themselves - it's a backlash to this autumn's grown-up elegance and also part of a 1980s revival," she says. Full Story

Monday, November 21, 2005

Jeans genius gives Pinoys the perfect fit


VIKTOR, a pricey local brand famous for custom-made jeans, has hit Manila -- big time.
Showbiz royalty Aga Muhlach owns 22 pairs of Viktor jeans. TV personality Korina Sanchez is a convert, with 22 pairs. Sexy star Maui Taylor, an avid collector since the label was just new, has eight pairs. Actors Richard Gomez and John Estrada bought seven and six pairs, respectively. And banker Ding Pastrana is Viktor's number one client with 40 pairs.
Viktor creator Victorino "Ino" Tablang Caluza, Jr., 29, explains why they're snapping up his creations. "Viktor is not about having trendy or cutting-edge designs. It's about fit. You can have it customized according to your body."
This Saturday afternoon, I interview Ino in his Ortigas condominium. I'm interrupted by four separate knocks on the door. Two Chinese-looking teenagers with their friends show up for fitting. A young couple drops by to pick up their orders. A first-timer slips into her first Viktor jeans and says, "It's nice!"A girl who accompanies her friend to the shop falls in love with Viktor pants adorned with Swarovski crystals, and ends up having her measurements taken. Full Story

Thursday, November 03, 2005

For those with eyes wide shut going through the subway, the poster displays two women standing with whips, and in the background a man (smiling) with a tic-tac-toe game beaten into his back. This ad disturbs me because Diesel is suggesting that you can derive pleasure not only just from wearing those jeans, but also from being flogged while wearing them.

Intrigued by this wayward image, I searched for the poster on Diesel's web page. A cause for greater concern arose in me when the campaign slogan to this picture appeared on the screen: "Unlock the door to Individual Hedonistic Pleasure Pursuits." The moral flaw in Diesel's campaign is that the poster corrupts the concept of pleasure, turning it into something that is gained by bringing pain to others. To me, beating someone while wearing jeans should not be promoted as an acceptable form of pleasure, simply because it undermines the basic "social contract" which binds society together.

Yes, I readily admit I overanalyzed the ad, but for good reason. My purpose was to demonstrate that Diesel has cleverly constructed the message that individuals should do whatever they want to achieve pleasure, no matter the consequences for others. Diesel stretches the concept of individual liberty by encouraging people to inflict pain on others to reach their own state of happiness. Viewers may not consciously internalize such a message, but on a subconscious level they very well could.