Confinement chic? All change for business wear during lockdown
LONDON — The suits, shirts, and ties remain on their hangers. Skirts, blouses, and high heels have been left in the closet. With office workers at home during coronavirus lockdown, the dress code is noticeably more casual.
According to clothing brands and marketing studies, comfort has trumped chic since offices closed and home-working became de rigueur to curb the global outbreak.
Even central bankers, normally seen in pin-stripes and tailored three-piece suits, have let themselves go.
Sam Wood, a member of the Bank of England’s very serious monetary policy committee, said he had only worn a tie for a photo opportunity with the Times newspaper and an online parliamentary hearing.
Even then, he teamed it up with jeans.
Socks and slippers
“Apparel consumption has quickly shifted in line with the new needs of home-bound consumers. Fashion is out, loungewear is in,” economic research firm Bernstein noted.
Article continues after this advertisementIn its first-quarter results released last week, British online clothing retail group Boohoo said chic tops to impress during video conferencing have been a hit – as have jogging bottoms.
Article continues after this advertisementThe fashion trend research firm Lyst has also seen a surge in demand for “sweatshirts, sweatpants, and shorts”. US sportswear giant Nike was among the favored brands.
German online retailer Zalando said slippers now topped the best-sellers in its shoe department, with sales of Adidas swimming pool slides – and snazzy socks – soaring.
High street chain stores though have seen sales slump because of the crisis and lockdown.
Next, for example, has had to close its stores and suspend online transactions while it adapted its warehouses to meet new social distancing guidelines.
As a result, its sales fell by 52 percent year-on-year, excluding promotions between the end of January and the end of April.
“People do not buy a new outfit to stay at home,” Next chief executive Simon Wolfson said last month.
But in a depressed environment, with city centers resembling ghost-towns, the boom in home furnishings has brought a crumb of comfort to hard-pressed retailers.
And marketing strategies are adapting to the spring 2020 wardrobe.
“Pyjamas and comfies have never seen so much marketing airtime before,” said Bernstein.
Zalando is also trying new techniques to rehabilitate fashion victims by launching an Instagram campaign – #StyleDayFriday – now that everyone is dressing down.
Other brands are getting in on the vogue for cocooning.
Zara’s website is featuring top models at home, posing without makeup.
Roots and beards
As well as laying bare employees’ interior decor choices, videoconferencing is exposing lengthening beards, increasingly shaggy haircuts, and exposed roots.
In the United States, Procter & Gamble has reported a sharp increase in sales in Laundry and Household Products division and a slight decline in its Beauty and Shaving lines.
At a recent conference with analysts, the multinational’s managers admitted a lower frequency of shaving when working from home was a problem.
But as Constance Jourdain, a consultant with the Nielsen research firm, explained: “What’s the point of shaving for a teleconference?
“Why put on makeup every day when you can’t go out anymore”, except to queue outside a supermarket with a mask on your face?
An anxiety-provoking climate equally doesn’t appear conducive to wanting to look one’s best.
But it doesn’t stop there.
Nielsen has noticed a sharp drop in sales over the last six weeks in France, in make-up products, hairdressing products, masks, and creams as well as… deodorants.
But there are still small signs that people have not let themselves go completely.
British department stores Waitrose and John Lewis have recorded a jump in sales of hair dyes and hair care products since the start of the country’s lockdown in March.
It could be the roots of recovery.
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