Category: GAP Jeans

DENIM-Made in the USA

 

PART I: pub. 10/17/2011 #denim

The denim market is one of the most aggressive growing apparel markets in history that has directly affected our social normality; running parallel to that of computer electronics. Cotton prices have risen to an all time high; causing the denim industry to adjust. Demands for consumer price stability and margin maintenance have become two of the most important business aspects that are causing all businesses to refine their strategies during our questionable economic times. Thus, sending many manufactured goods overseas to be produced in order to keep companies in business and consumers happy with the prices they are used to. Denim has been coined an “American thing” however, are we loosing that “nickname” as more denim is being produced outside the USA. I would hope that the USA will retain its position as the largest denim consumer market (2010) and become the denim production Mecca of the world.  Real Men Real Style and The Butt Therapist have come together for a little denim education and highlight a few denim addicted Americans designers that are making an industry statement by communicating their personal integrity through their business operations by producing denim products that are Made in the USA. “You can support your country one jean at a time.”

From the beginning of Levi Strauss in 1869, the work man’s functional uniform, to casual Friday’s, and denim debuting on catwalks across the globe. Denim has gone beyond the borders and the social benches to create global social unity or as I like to refer as “the blue universal language”. When it comes down to spending your dollar wisely more people are making it a priority to find out where the products they buy are produced and an increased number of consumers are taking the company’s mission into consideration when deciding who to support before they hand their hard-earned dollar over the counter. The level of competition with-in various Jeanswear segments are at war with each other as they have been required to rethink their business and operation strategies to become most effective and streamline their manufacturing and distribution processes. The top three challenges companies are trying to prioritize are:

  • Achieving Consumer Price Stability
  • Maintaining the Brand’s Heritage
  • Increasing Market Growth

Today a single product can visit as many as 8 countries before achieving product completion and being sale ready. To help you figure out where your dollar is going and decide where it will be going for future purchases we’ve broken it down to US denim mills, denim manufacturers, independent denim designers, and even a few retail stores that focus on selling only Made in USA products. It all starts with a piece of cotton and 25,000 farmer-owners that are committed to continually improving the denim manufacturing process.

American Cotton Growers (ACG) has a total capacity of 38 million  yards of denim produced annually which is approximately 26 million pair of jeans; making them a major supplier of denim fabric to the jeans market for 35 years. Plains Cotton Cooperative Association is a farmer–owned,cotton marketing, warehousing, denim manufacturing and jean production cooperative headquartered in Lubbock, Texas. All from Littlefield, TX SafeDenim is “Sustainable, American and Friendly to the Environment”. Owned and operated by The American Cotton Growers—or ACG—and its farmer-owners are focused on developing high quality denim fabrics for our customers with minimal impact on the environment. American cotton literally created from field to fabric. For them it’s a multi-generational commitment to ensure our children and grandchildren can farm the land. We’re protecting our ecosystems for these future generations by remaining good stewards of the land, air and water. We value doing the right thing, in the right place, in the right way, at the right time, and it requires the use of new technologies.” -SafeDenim/ACG

Denim North America is the most modern textile plant in North America and committed to their manufacturing process to be 100%.

 Made in the USA. They are developing and distributing innovative fabric to premium denim companies for global distribution. The newest innovation is the release of EverFlex (6/1/2011); a denim fabric that may be found as the next pair of jeans you buy. What this means is that any jean that has the patented EverFlex label is Made in the USA; even if the denim company chooses to constructs it’s denim outside the USA you can find comfort knowing that the fibers and production of the fabric are 100% USA Made. The EverFlex fabric is projected to hit the premium denim market that may include brands such as: True Religion, Lucky, 7 for all Mankind, Hudson and possibly Gap. So, EverFlex… is a NEW patented stretch denim fabric that retains its shape better than any other cotton based denim blend on the market to date. This means no more bagging out, stretching out, break in period or droopy butts.

White Oak Denim Mill (Greensboro, NC.) has been manufacturing denim since 1905 making jeans for a plethora of denim brands that put quality first. Cone Denim offers a denim companies to create collections that are 100% USA Made. Denim Brands like Loomstate, True Religion, Agave, and Paul Smith’s Red Ear are just a few examples.

“I walked in-between a web of 350 strands of cotton dancing in the air across a 100 year old wood floor that united each organized chaotic piece of thread into a rope the width of a silver dollar that was slapped around a ball warping machine. It looked like a giant friendship bracelet being made. Tchaikovsky would have been inspired for a melody and the orchestra would follow the rhythm of the 30 original shuttle looms that weave in unison and send an unduplicitable vibration through your bones; I could have stood there for an eternity.  Possibly one of my most beautiful experiences confirming that I am a Denim Dork!”-The Butt Therapist

There are employees that have worked at White Oak for over 30 years. The stories they have of the process changes that have happened over the years through technology advancements and industry innovation with blends, dye, finishing treatments, and trends have warped through the decades makes for its own story. Making denim as an art itself; a magnificent creative process from a single cotton fiber to your favorite jeans on your toosh. Right-hand twill, Left, Flame woven, blends, slubs, and weaving patterns.  Even with over 100 years of producing some of the best quality denim in the world even they are feeling the pinch with the economic changes that have forced more apparel brands to find manufacturing resources overseas in order to keep the COGS down as consumers are becoming less likely to pay premium prices for denim made in the USA. Every business that produces a product must retain a certain amount of margin to self-adjust and absorb changing production costs: cotton, fuel, shipping, labor, innovation, and quite frankly to keep them in business while the economy stabilizes and sales projections can begin to be more accurate.  “We feel it comes down to education and passion” Lawson Nikol is a passionate denim head that is interested in a Blue Revolution. Co-founder Nikol of All American Clothing Company  (based in Arcanum, OH) discovered on a retail floor that the company he proudly worked for by distributing USA Made Denim had been outsourced. This marked the beginning of him launching his own company to attempt to keep some denim Made in the USA to “support the heritage of jeans, American families and the American Dream.”- AAC. All American Clothing Company is the only listed denim manufacturer listed as Made in the USA Certified. Each jean is given a “Certificate of Authenticity” that allows you to trace the exact location your jeans were produced.  You can buy All American Clothing collections online and in selected retail posts from California to New York City. The Nickol family prides itself on producing products patrons can be proud to wear.  The family and the employees believe “The USA label will always stay on our jeans because you and we understand the importance of USA Made. When you buy a pair of All American Jeans our label also means; Thank you from us, our employees and the people in our country who still have good jobs due to folks like you. Thank you from all of us.” -Nikol

Handcrafted Denim from an artist to a collector; the process is worth the penny…

Roy Slaper is a single man handcrafting each pair of jeans Roy Denim available to buy only at Self Edge for around $275.00. Beginning in his apartment teaching himself how to sew; he now has one of the most impressive sewing machine collections and jeans in the USA! Roy feels that jean making is a lost art.  It is not often enough that we think about our clothing as someone else’s work and trying to measure how much “work” went into the design and construction of our favorite shirt let alone our favorite pair of jeans. Roy experimented with many garments but made a business by designing and creating custom jeans. He learned as he went, taught himself a craft and refined it to just one thing; Denim, available in 2 styles, made perfectly by hand in Oakland, CA. He uses only the highest grade denim fabric that is he believes in and has worked with Cone Denim on several occasions to produce his ideal denim fabric.

 I wrote a 31 page article about Denim; Made in the USA however, overwhelming you with information is not my goal. Consider this PARTI of the Denim Saga.

All my denim love,

The Butt Therapist

———————————–Don’t forget to check out Antonio with Real Men Real Style

 

 

Top Women’s Jean Brands

As of May 19, 2011 via WWD

1. Levi Strauss

 

2. American Eagle Outfitters

 

3.Old Navy

 

4. Gloria Vanderbilt

 

5. Lee

 

6. Gap

 

7. Aeropostale

 

8. Express

 

9. Polo/Ralph Lauren

 

10. Faded Glory (Wal-Mart)

via WWD

Cotton Crunch

When jeggins first made their debut on retail floors my first thought was “how much is cotton these days?” It is not that I thought they were horrible, i like jeggings but when you work with women every day and you have a size 2 complaining about how skinny they look or their little cupcake peeking over their waistband I was wondering how in the world am I going to get women in these tight little jeans?

 

My job got a bit more intense confidence building went on overdrive. Now 3 years later there is less and less cotton in denim and I am missing my 100% cotton, destroyed and intricate washed denim that I cherish so much. Will consumers still be able to replace those favorite pair of jeans that are becoming more and more coveted these days?

 


 

There was a WWD article by Kristi Ellis and Aurthur Friedman that caught my attention on the rising cost of cotton and how the economy is changing the denim world and fashion for that matter.

 

“We face an unpredictable cotton market and unpredictable consumer response to rising prices,” John Anderson, CEO Levi Strauss.

 

“The higher cost of cotton could negativly impact margins and working capital as we work through 2011″ Blake jorgensen, CFO Levi Strauss.

 

Alden Halpern, CEO of 4Whatitsworlth, a jounior denim company with jeans retailing from $24.00 to $34.00. (I know cheap right…my jeans average $189.00) anticipated the spike in cotton prices a year ago and stockpiled 4 million yards of fabric at lower prices with his factories inChina. Halpen said the strategy paid off and allowed the company to maintain prices, but he will still have to face higher fabric costs in the last three months of the year because his stockpiled denim SOLD OUT! Who is 4 whatitsworth?…Tyte Jeans & Rewash Jeans are few of the lines they make. So, how did 4Whatitsworth end up with a 40% increase? They cut their space in LA from 120,000 sq ft to 16,00, cut their workforce by 20%, moved 11 people to aNEW office in China and sold their stockpiled denim while restructuring their company.

 

More denim companies are relying on new blends and adding more polyester, spandex, rayon, spandex, lyocell, and looking for more cotton alternatives.

 

Split denim says that fabric accounts for 30% of the cost of a garment and Makers of True originals has seen 10%-15% increases in the “first cost” of a finished garment. Many companies like Split are trying to keep their retail amount consistent and absorb the increases themselves. however, consumers should be aware that companies can only hold off the increases so long and they must be prepared for apparel prices across the board to increase as the cost of goods sold is dramatically increasing. 

 

So, after the cost of cotton is increased so is the labor… where are your jeans made now? “Bangladesh, Pakistan, Cambodia and Vietnam are gaining denim business…All major brands are moving to Bangladesh, in particular; if you can’t get cotton cheap, you try to get labor and washing cheaper and sometimes with out a duty on it” Michael Silver, Presidentof Silver Jeans Co.

 

Denimatrix, a division of the Plains Cooperative association produces jeans for Abercrombie & Fitch, Gap, Guess and Urban Outfitters. Carlos Arias, President, says “in the past companies could go to three or four places to find core fabrics but today, it is a “produce-to-order” business, which means longer lead times.”

 

So, the industry is changing and before you- the consumer complain about where your jeans are made or the extra $5.00 bucks you are shelling out for that piece of indigo; understand that $5.00 is a deal and support the companies you truly want to support rather than buying just to buy and spending 15 minutes complaining about them being made in China. They are made in China because the consumer won’t gladly pay a premium to be made in the USA! The power lies with in the consumer to choose “what to buy” and “how much” you are willing to use your dollar to say “I care”? 

 


A Denim LOVE story…

butttherapist: ... the magical woven fabric that we live our life in always has a story. With denim being acceptable nearly 95% of the time, the amount of memories being made in a single pair of jeans is curious. Some people have music, some of us… a KILLER denim collection. Kill your jeans, Love your denim, buy new jeans; make more memories.

Keep sending the stories my way. Thanks Manshion for sharing your “forgotten” denim love story. xox

For the love of Denim,

Your butttherapist


manshion:

I don’t know how I overlooked these. Apparently I bought a pair of GAP selvage denim jeans in late 2006 without even knowing they were anything special. If I knew then what I know now, these things would look like freakin’ artwork today. Crazy. I was just cleaning out my dresser, making space for things and noticed the upturned cuff on this forgotten pair of jeans.Back then, I was rotating about 5 pairs of jeans and it shows because these things have virtually no wear and tear. Actually, a tear at the cuff exists because highwaters were not cool (to me) back in the day and I let them meet the pavement (sadly). They’re straight cut, and from GAP, so they’re an inch roomier than need be. I’m going to shrink them up (they need a wash anyway) to see if that helps. Otherwise, an inch (from the inseam, not outseam-can’t ruin the selvage striping) cut from the tailor’s hand below the knee would make these ideal. I’ll keep you posted. Just had to share. Amazing to think that I probably passed these over and benched them for 3 years for some H&M jeans (no offense) (shots fired!) (oh no he didn’t!)

I love finding old stuff. In the pockets? Medicated chapstick and one of the $2k worth of tickets I racked up living on Massachusetts Avenue. Brings a smile to my face now.

GAP…continued; are they finished?

gapOh… Gap; as I promised- I have completed your fit test and a complementary secret shop. The last question I asked before my {To be continued…} “Do Gap jeans fit better than Paige Premium Denim?” Let’s back up here… you may be wondering why I would ask such a question. The latest Gap ad reads “The BEST fitting premium denim” While narrowing down “who” Gap is truly competing with I have already eliminated 12-25 age demographic. Therefore, the main competitor for “mom” jeans and “all about the fit (butt) jeans” is Paige Premium Denim. When you are paying special attention to what your butt looks like in a pair of jeans more so than the novelty of the pocket design. If so, than Paige Jeans are for you- I’d suggest the Skyline or the Laurel Canon. If you are wearing “mom” jeans please go to your local denim shop and try on a pair of Paige Hidden Hills or Rising Glen; I promise your toosh will never have looked so good! I have to say that across the board with regard to pocket placement and fit. Paige Premium Denim has the best fit for the American woman; that in return gives “her” the greatest value- bottom-line.

So, this article did not queue while I was in Europe; my apologies, but as you continue reading you’ll understand why I have deemed it a fortunate accident.  I went to one of my local Gap stores and put their denim to the fit test but I couldn’t help but take notes as I was forced to do a secret shop. Re-branding Gap and dumping tons of cash into developing a denim collection with the intention to compete in the premium denim market you cannot ignore your store experience. Even if you get your customer in the door- they must stay long enough to try something on and ideally you’d like them to come back again and again.

SECRET SHOP: I visited the Washington Square location in Portland, Oregon. Walking through the double doors to NO music, the volume was so low that I had to stop and strain to hear a slight rumble of tunes. There was no one in the front rooms in men’s or women’s. Obviously, I was not greeted and management is not worried that anyone is going to steal anything. I pulled one style of every jean in 2 sizes; still not a single associate acknowledged my presence. I walked into the next room where there was one associate at the register with 7 people in line. One frustrated gal set down her 3 shirts on the closest table and left. You can be rest assured that she didn’t really like them anyway but Gap missed out on an impulse purchase.

Who’s in the store: I saw new mom’s with strollers trying to navigate between the tables, a couple 20 year olds that are having some style issues, and there were some 10-12 year olds that were being drug by their mothers for back to school shopping. These kids were not excited about shopping; was it shopping at the Gap, shopping with mom, or just a lack of interaction? They are all easy fixes but they are intentional fixes that require store experience to become the focus of your store management training. Based on who I have seen in your stores in Oregon, California and New York I would suggest a play area for little tikes so new mom’s can shop in a fragment of peace. You have to decide who YOU are and your specific demographic will find you! I can’t wait for the Pastis story!!!!!

Continuing through to the back room an associate talking on a headset walked right by me not even making eye contact- I tried. I grabbed the next associates attention and asked them where the fitting rooms were. She pointed to the right and said back there; remember my arms are full of denim. I walked to the fitting rooms finding my own fitting room and begun putting your butt to the test. About 15 minutes into the process and having a customer take pictures of my butt in Gap jeans… a sales associate said “hi” and even took one of the pictures. She wasn’t that good of a photographer so, I continued using the customer for her camera phone skills. She was shopping with the gal across from me that was near wit’s end on finding a new pair of jeans after just having a child and being able to update a little.

1-     The Long & Lean: is a mid-rise trouser leg jean priced at $69.50 and runs 2 sizes big. It is most comparable to the Seven 4 all mankind Charlize. The leg line is good and quite clean however; the toosh could use a little bit of work through the yolk.

2-     The Curvy: The dark wash is really good however for being the “curvy” fit you’d think it would have more than 1% stretch… most comparable to the 7 for all mankind Kimmie. I went down one size even with the 1% stretch. The leg line is slimming with the slim boot cut makes for a leaner leg. The rear pockets are still a bit far a part to really create the butt for the curvy toosh. I don’t think it warrants the $69.50 price tag.

3-    The legging Jean: everything about this jean contradicts except that it runs true to size. Priced at $69.50 this should be priced at $49.50 in your pricing structure by comparison to other denim companies and the price point of their “legging denim”.  The legging jean should just go to being a jegging and increase the amount of stretch- The knee placement is correct however, the crinkle wash is UNFORGIVING on the butt and the back of the thigh. When a gal goes for the super tight jean the last thing she wants is the back of the thighs highlighted. The photograph looks like I have headlights on my rear! Jbrand, Pur, Paige’s Verdugo and Seven 4 all mankind’s Skinny “skin” have the best jeggins on the market that I have come across.

4-     Forever Skinny: Mid-rise at $59.50 was one of my most favorable as it has great potential to be their number one skinny body. I was truly expecting this to be my personal favorite. I had to go down 1 size- but again, I was very disappointed when I turned around. The pockets are further apart then Seven 4 all mankind and 7FAM pockets are almost too far apart for most women. Paige skyline the 7FAM’s Roxanne, Diesel Matic, and the Hudson straight are both a better overall fit. However, all you have do adjust the pocket placement.

5-     Sexy Boot: My favorite jean from the front! 1% stretch is the way to my personal heart. Retailing at $59.50 it reminds me of my classic favorites and very overly loved Paige Laurel Canyon and classic boot from Citizen. Even with a good front and a clean leg line it is all lost and the value gone when you do your 145 degree turn in the fitting room mirror when your butt just looks a mile and a half wider than you know it is. The medium tint wash I tried on was definitely my favorite!

6-     The Perfect Boot: is just that- This is Gap’s most sellable jean; you can sell this all day long! Mid-rise with a double button, bootcut jean is an easy purchase for random everyday jean if you are unaware you can purchase the Paige Hidden Hills or the 7 for all mankind hi-waist bootcut, Hudson Bootcut, William Rast Stella, The AG Jesse, or several others on sale else where that will have 1 ½ inches of fabric placed differently that will visually lift your toosh just enough to noticeably grin in the mirror. I even suggested it to the gal in the fitting room across from me in a size smaller than all the jeans she was trying on. New mom out for her 1st pair of jeans before the baby weight was all gone (a quick fix that seamed quite painful as she had over 15 pairs of jeans on the floor. She bought the Perfect boot and left 5 minutes after I handed her the right size in the right jeans for her. Gap- keep training your crew on fitting… 15 jeans on the floor is way too many! People HATE shopping for jeans like they hate shopping for swimsuits- but they love buying them when they find them.


Gap TAKE NOTES:  The dark and the medium tint washes are your strongest- the medium light to light washes need a lot of work with hues and fade placement. The sizing is not consistent enough to be marketing to the masses without training your associates in fitting walk-in customers. This is an opportunity. I witnessed exhausting “fitting” attempts. You can make it easier for your associates and customers by adjusting your fit blocks and decreasing your sizing inconsistencies.

The curved waistbands are IMPRESSIVE. I take-in the waist to nearly every pair of jeans I touch on EVERY client about an inch. Your waistbands have the right amount of curve in them. The butt, the butt, the butt…. Freebie here…. Take the seat in ¼ inch, the rear pockets need to be raised almost 3/4 inch and come together about ½ and inch. If I actually detached the pockets and put them back on, I might even add a slight tilt for the customers that are buying your jeans to make a favorable view across the hips.

Oh… the Pastis story!!!!!! Okay- I went to NYC for FNO, Fashion Week and get a little vacation on. My friend and I cab’ed it to Pastis first thing in the morning for some of the most fantastic fresh fruit topped waffles; since Belgium. The table next to me had 3 people sitting at it. One Woman that didn’t say much, a man suited up full of nods and pointing, and a younger gal with about 10 large sheets of glossy paper beautifully prepared. I assume she is pitching a branding strategy. Being intrigued myself- I was ease dropping and trying to catch “who” it was for. I began laughing and talking with my friend about the presentation and strategy to be from the dark ages. It’s not the 80’s anymore. One of the photos’s showed an attractive woman with sunglasses on with the title “ she likes to feel sexy” QUESTION: what woman doesn’t like to feel sexy? Picture 2: Casual dressed woman with the title “ she juggles many tasks every day” QUESTION: What person today is not juggling daily tasks better than a professional clown from the Ringling Brothers? Picture 3: hot guy with the title: he like to feel stylish QUESTION: really? I am thinking who in the world is branding their apparel line so vaguely? How do they expect to reach a target market when you are not putting the research into direct consumer insights? I am beside myself in awe… that there are still companies that are using such ineffective tools to build their business in a time that technology has allowed us to track our clients so well. In all my International business, marketing,consumer behavior, branding, communication classes this presentation was unacceptable and one could argue the it not being worth the paper it was printed on.

I was thinking whatever company this was for is going to be experiencing some serious connection problems if there were going to direct and build their brand on such vague and common identifiers to attempt to understand or reach their desired demographic. I continued loving every bite of my breakfast. Pastis is great; I highly suggest going for breakfast. Still intrigued, heck- I couldn’t take my ears and eyes off the table next to me. A few comments didn’t mean anything, they were just conversation fillers, and there were a lot of nods and a couple moments where one might say it was a conversation. It looked as if they were all on the same page and feeling like the meeting was going well and the presentation was good. I was blown away and in complete awe- I had to know who this company was…

I thought maybe I would give them a call and see if they were interested in hiring me for a couple projects to get their team aligned and tasked out to gain real consumer information so they could build a concrete brand identity and identify their target market with regard to their current consumer. As I am sipping the last of my cappuccino the presentation papers are being flipped over to the front page. The suspense was killing me- all my attention went to the glossy white sheets to show me a navy blue square in the bottom right hand corner that read “GAP”……. I gagged on my coffee drink and nearly made a spectacle of myself trying not to choke on my perfect pre-Italian cappuccino laughing because this post was supposed to be queuing that day- This all started because I was frustrated. Watching an iconic brand that was once so successful to becoming lost in a mass of retailers; I finally got the glimpse inside that I wanted.

HERE IS THE UNDERLINING PROBLEM.

 Where are the photos of your customers shopping IN your 3,465 stores worldwide? I am pretty sure you can gain quite the insight on “who” your consumer is if you paid attention to the people giving you their dollar. Collegiate… have you been on a college campus this year for interviews. Sexy, where is the “style” in your basics,  Best fit, I am sorry if it hurts a little bit but you need to continue to refine your collection and possibly replace your fit model. Take a look at your industry, your market, your competitors and discover what YOU do better then them- I know! I am sure you can figure it out and re-define a brand worth building!  You can call me anytime and I will see what I can do about adjusting my schedule. You are taking some needed and positive baby steps this year that are milestones from the last 10 years. Keep it up.

10/2010 POST UPDATE- Thank you for changing your logo BACK to the original. There are no problems with regard to the logo. I promise! Instead, pay special attention to the lifestyle disconnect you are experiencing with your consumers. This goes in a circle right back to your store shopping experience. I understand wanting to grow with your consumer and raise the bar. My best advice- send me a check if you use it please… on the items you want to consider a “sophisticated” or “premium” product line- all you need to do is use the navy blue square as your brand identifier on the product.- YOU ARE AN ICON; you don’t require the white letters spelling out GAP, everyone knows “who” the blue square is associated with.

I am hoping you have a team going through your Facebook page comments during the “logo up heave” there were hundreds of consumers, marketing and branding guru’s giving you their attention, insights and feedback. The most common consumer feedback I read was “increase the quality on adult clothing” most common marketing feedback “the logo is PERFECT as is”. I hope this helps and doesn’t hurt too much… constructive criticism has the ability to create growth. Sometimes, it is difficult to get it from your own house- especially someone willing to play devils advocate to push the envelope and dig deeper into any and all plausible opportunities. Best of Luck.

Does Gap have what it takes?

Good morning denim lovers, it is nearly 3am and I have written you a novel. David Moin wrote an article in this weeks WWD; about “Gap Gearing Up Denim” that caught my attention. Gap…denim… really; we are going to do this AGAIN? I am not convinced that Gap Inc. knows how to communicate their brand, differentiate their store experience or have a “real” relationship with their customer… who are they? J crew knows who they are and who their client is…Does gap have the right crew to pull off the gap brand being cool and return to be a closet staple like it was in the 90′s? 

 

Personally, I am going direct here- let’s ask the questions; I have asked several kids, friends and even my own clients {what do you think about GAP} Some comments I may be playing devils advocate,  than again, some may be right inline with my personal belief that fact is there are questions that need to be answered and considered. Enjoy….

What kind of shopping destination is Gap and would “you” ever go back?

The sales we saw last year in the 2009 during the retail meltdown gave everyone a chance to have designer goods for garage sale prices. Do you really want to give back the labels you love or have you begun a small, planned collection of love-able items in your closet…the yearly fashion bucket list I call it… I’ve got one! You just may haven’t actually wrote yours down. Go get a notepad…

Are people being “YOU” willing to pay full retail for Gap jeans @$59.50-$70.00 rather than hitting the killer sales at your favorite specialty store or much less skip the opportunity at Nordstrom Rack to score a pair of $200.00 designer jeans for sixty-five bucks? Who is the Gap customer; I don’t believe they know who their customer is nevertheless who to market to!

Another favorite Quote: “Prior Proper Planning Prevents Poor Performance” unknown

I am gonna break it down in “coffee talk”…quick!

Rock & Republic kids

Elementary School: Yes! Grade school kids are wearing designer jeans…It is common for kids to be rewarded with “socially coveted cloth” designer jeans for finishing their monthly book reading list.  If you were to walk into an elementary school you would see, P.S by Areopostal ($29.50), abercrombie Kids ($32.00), and probably some Levi’s, a few randoms but that’s parents… not the kids! If you asked the kid, they would tell you what they like {they already know}. They might just be waiting for their older sister’s hand me downs. FYI:Older sister is cool- she’s wearing the cool jeans that she earns for doing chores and having good grades. If you ask the parents-it’s about money- but Gap jeans aren’t going to be cheap they are comparable. Every company should want to introduce their product and brand to a potential customer as soon as possible in order to develop brand loyalty and allow the brand to become part of the consumer’s identity. “lifestyle branding is beautiful” you’ve seen it at work; its like shaking Tinkerbell’s fairy dust on each person that walks in your store- a little magic”. How early….look at Baby designer jeans- Joe’s, Seven 4 all Mankind, True Religion, Levi’s Vintage, Diesel, little Marc Jacobs… heck- we’ve got DENIM Huggies!

Middle School:

6th graders- the babies on campus again; luckily they are starting a new team sport to help adjust and make some new friends. They are beginning to make decisions based on their ideal and start developing a personal identity and identify with brands, groups, and are striving for social acceptance. They most likely just got their first magazine subscription. Gap…where are you spending your advertising dollars? I can’t see Gap jeans being hotter than Abercrombie & Fitch in middle school; because the high school kids are wearing them and working in the stores-they’re “cool” kids. It doesn’t take rocket science to know middle schooler’s look up to older siblings, high school kids, and celebrities.  Just like the incoming freshman want the designer jeans that are on the 11 and 12th graders… POCKET ENVY! The lifestyle branding VALUE kids get to feel accepted and confident is priceless. Have you been back there lately…it’s not pretty! No matter how much you develop a child skills, talents and value system, acceptance or lack there of at such a young age makes a difference in their confidence and motivation with their endeavor.

Alright, your 6,7,8 grader DOES NOT GO SHOPPING WITH THEIR PARENTS! The mall is like a big FREE babysitter! They even have security; “let’s call it multi-tasking for the mums and the “social time” for the kids. This is when shopping becomes a “hobby” or a way to “pass” the time. Going to the mall is about all they can do when they are not playing sports or doing homework. Kids are at the mall…shopping with their friends, hanging out and spending their parents money WITHOUT THEM. Is it a cool experience to go in to Gap? ya.. no. Turn the music up- incorporate a video arcade… dude- something to get these kids excited about being a part of your BRAND! Kids are amazing… I truly want like…a million! They are blank canvases just waiting for a killer sales associate to walk up and play dress up, show them how great they look in such in such brand of clothing and teach them a little bit of style. But instead… no one pays attention to the kids in the store… do they? Well, I do! I have had an entire 6th grade cheerleading squad come down to my store and do a little cheer ’cause they all shop with me.  I am the ultimate big sister and I will adopt anyone that needs one. I think it is the coolest thing ever to have someone look up to you and a beautiful responsibility to show them how special they are; inspire them to want to do great things! p.s. I am not talking about dressing up little girls in mini denim skirts and ruffles. I am talking about taking an eleven year old that is shy or prissy and making her confident enough to rock the boys camo cargo shorts, a pink tank top, hoodie, ripped up denim jacket and flip flops – when all the other girls are wearing the denim mini skirts, make-up and tight tee-shirts “little kid sexy”. Which little girl is going to be stronger, self-confident, and find her own personal style and identity first?

Kids are also wearing at this point: Hollister, A&F, 55DSL, Lucky, and American Eagle, and breaking in to designer jeans like Seven 4 all mankind. Rock & Republic killed kids with POCKET ENVY; everyone learned about designer denim real quick!

Oh.. the dreaded HIGH SCHOOL: If you are sending your child out to war their freshman year without the damn pocket just get them a pair so they don’t have to deal with it! “go to the mattresses” Kids can be VERY cruel! So, give-in for them, just one pair that’s all it takes to be “accepted” into the club or should I say avoid being “rejected” from the clicks. At least they have 4 years to decide if they want to be friends with any of the other kids rather than it not being an option. First impressions go both ways! I would LOVE a brand to emphasize individuality and “secret” of the brand. Levi has remained true to the All-American lifestyle…so, far as Levi’s are neither coveted nor shunned with the youth age group.

We are in high school now and are parents may or may not wear designer denim but… I bet they do, because it took over the WORLD! If mom does, then daughter is stealing them or begging for more! Dad is going to buy them for his son-cake!

So, what is paired with every hoodie and henley in the halls… jeans! But, again are they gap jeans? Would they become gap jeans? Levis are just American- blank-accepted- and less expensive than the new gap jeans.

COLLEGE: If you didn’t get the magical cloth in high school well- YOU ARE GETTING SENT OFF TO COLLEGE WITH THEM! Why? because this kid is fed up with NOT having them in high school- sick of it! Are incoming freshman rushing in Gap jeans? When you have 7 days to show who you are and that you belong to a particular “social” group? NO! Hudson, Citizen’s, Rich n’ Skinny, Rock & Republic.. oh yea! Need a refresher from your SAT’s… Attorney is to suit as College student is to jeans; it’s a uniform people. The only difference is that these uniforms also serve as status symbols… I am not even going to start on Handbags!

COLLEGE: This is where your consumer learns about personal services available at Barney’s, Neiman Marcus, Forum Stores, SAKS 5th Avenue, Bergdorf Goodman, Harrods, “some” Nordstrom stores and the INTERNET groups like GILT and Ruelala. How’s your loyalty right now… gap- do you have any interactive college apps?

Now, all these kids are good kids, honor roll, driven, are/have great friends, confident, ambitious (they are going to change the world you know), and family oriented. But, our youth is our time to experiment, express, and decide who we are and mold who we are going to be- Seize the day! Fashion is the way we decide how we are going to start our future! You’ve heard it once, you’ve heard it twice…”everyone is in such a hurry to grow up”… are you still wearing children’s clothing?

So, you’re average college student buys: A&F, Hollister, AE, Levis, Seven 4 all mankind, William Rast, Urban Outfitters, Rock n’ Republic, XXI, Hudson…and hits up Nordstrom Rack FIRST! Gap— who is going to gap… there is no music, no service, no prints, “overpriced” basics and …no memorable lifestyle shopping experience? Personally, I am busy- and I don’t have time to go shopping if it is not going to be an EVENT or BLISS!

Post college: you’re BROKE! Thank god you stocked up on all your denim when you were in college… you’re starving now so, they all fit again! However, that first tax return they get for actually working an entire year is sooo… going to buy the newest hottest jeans in February! Although, graduation is only 5 months away from Christmas!

Thus far…baby gap is pretty strong, Toddler gap sizes definitely do-able, teen and young adult- NEEDS SOME WORK!

Addicted to denim... that’s us these days, always on to the next. The best, perfect pocket placement in a world consumed by pocket envy… or so, far beyond that it is just all about the butt! There’s the question [ding, ding, ding, ding, ding] Does gap have a better denim butt then Paige Premium Denim?

{to be continued}…