During one of the many industry downturns that have plagued me, us and everyone in media since the advent of the Internet, I took a job folding clothes at a Macyâs in North St. Louis County, Mo.
It did not pay anywhere near as much as my long-lost job as a newspaper reporter in Bakersfield, Calif., but it kept my parents from wanting to kill me and paid for my cellphone bill as I looked for better, greener pastures far, far away from their basement.
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The Macyâs where I worked, which has since closed, was a dying Macyâs in a near-dead mall, the kind of store where people in the neighborhood no longer went. Even though it sold all the same things, it wasnât a âniceâ Macyâs in a âcoolâ mall, like the one in wealthier West County or at the Galleria near Clayton, Mo. People in North County, even though they lived nowhere near those Macyâs stores, liked to go to them; but if something didnât fit or if it was time to return a gift, theyâd come to our older Macyâs to make our profit-losing store ever more profit-losing.
We werenât hip. We didnât have cachet. And thatâs what really matters in fashion sales. But that goes beyond old malls with old stores. Fashion is about fantasy. Theyâre selling aspirational, overpriced dreams in size 4 pants. They are selling an aesthetic, a brand identity that people can buy into.
From Lululemon to Givenchy, itâs about that âitâ factor, that coolness, that status. And to the fashion industry, nothing says âstatusâ like thinness. Which means that what itâs not doing is selling to the plus-size marketâone of the largest-growing markets, at $17.5 billion, and the most underserved marketâbecause to the fashion industry, fat people are like âthe dead Macyâs in the dying mallâ of clientele: Nobody in the industry wants to go there because selling clothes to the average woman is not cool.
âNobodyâ now includes BeyoncĂ©.
If âsalesâ were what mattered, the music superstar wouldnât have taken her new âathleisureâ line, Ivy Park, to Topshop, a U.K. retailer that doesnât even bother to carry plus sizes. And BeyoncĂ© is BeyoncĂ©, so I doubt Topshop was her only option. (Nordstromâs website lists Ivy Park among clothing size 16-18, or XXL, but when you click on the items, the largest size available is still a 12-14. A quick call to a Nordstrom representative clarified that 12-14, or XL, is, in fact, the largest size you can purchase.) BeyoncĂ© could have taken Ivy Park to any retailer and acknowledged that some of her fansâthe main people who would gladly pay whatever to be just a little bit closer to herâcome in sizes larger than a 12 or 14, but she didnât.
Instead, sheâs yet another retailer taking part in the âaspirationalâ fantasy, this industry standard of ignoring fat people. These are the same retailers who pretend that fat people donât exist, and claim that fat people donât âfit our brandâ; donât like overpriced, stretchy yoga pants; and wonât do in those yoga pants the same things skinny people doâwhich are mostly watch Netflix and go on grocery-store runs while looking âsporty.â
âBut ⊠but maybe this will inspire some woman to lose weight so she can buy Ivy Park,â says some person who thinks that shame is the best motivator.
If shame made people skinny, all of America would be thin.
It doesnât. I can speak from personal experience that it does make you more likely to hate yourself and fall into depression, though. And depression makes you want to eat more and exercise less. And that will make you even more overweight. So ⊠is there another option?
The other option is to just sell nice clothes to fat people. We need clothes. We like clothes. We have money (or at least I do since I stopped working at Macyâs in 2009). Why should my only option be to hide in my house until I gradually burn my weight down to Beyoncé size? Should no clothing (or only ugly, poorly made, misshapen clothing) be available to me as some punishment for being overweight? Should I feel bad about myself all the time, cry myself to sleep and die alone?
Probably not going to do that. Probably going to keep trying to dress nicely while also being overweight. Probably going to spend my money on stretchy exercise pants elsewhere. BeyoncĂ©âs not going to get my money when it comes to Ivy Park, but then, her decision to go with Topshop says that she never wanted it. So I guess weâre cool? But what about all those larger-than-size-14 Beyoncé fans out there? If youâre fat, you canât get in âFormationâ with some Ivy Park gear?
The âaverageâ American woman is a size 14. The average African-American woman weighs around 187 pounds. Thereâs no excuse for not selling to the plus-size market, and itâs not as if BeyoncĂ© doesnât know better. The clothing line she had with her mother, House of DerĂ©on, used to sell jeans in all sizes, jeans I used to hang up and fold at that old Macyâs.
I guess Iâm somewhat disappointed because BeyoncĂ©, for the most part, has been so on point on everything else of late, from feminism to the embracing of her roots in âFormationâ to her Black Panther-themed Super Bowl performanceâall flawless, all welcoming. But this doesnât feel welcoming. This feels like the same fashion elitism that has always existed within the industryâthe same industry that doesnât like women with hips, butts or thighs; that seems wholly ignorant at times about women of color; that engages in blackface with far too much frequency and often says out-of-touch or offensive things.
This seems like a pretty big misstep, and maybe sheâll correct it. Maybe sheâll eventually open up Ivy Park to the plus-size market. Although, again, given that her partner is Topshop, which sells only tall, petite, maternity and straight sizes, that doesnât bode well. But if anyone could get Topshop to change its tune, itâs BeyoncĂ©.
But why did it have to be âmaybeâ?
Why do so many womenâs Ivy Park dreams have to be relegated to the dead and the dying until someone changes his or her mind?
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