Bangkok Post

THAT FESTIVE LOOK

The unveiling of Christmas windows in New York department stores has become a big-budget spectacle

- STORY: MATTHEW SCHNEIER

It was 16C on a recent evening in New York, but the scaffolds outside Lord & Taylor on Fifth Avenue were trimmed with artificial fir, and Santa Claus himself was bopping with Liz Rodbell, the store’s president, to Austin Mahone’s Mmm Yeah.

Mahone, a clean-scrubbed pop star, was crooning it live to a gathering of hundreds of teenage girls, who were crowded behind the metal barricades that surrounded the makeshift theatre, chirping “mmm, mmm, yeah, yeah” in response.

The occasion was the unveiling of Lord & Taylor’s holiday windows, an event that, like similar vernissage­s at competitor­s such as Bloomingda­le’s, Bergdorf Goodman and Barneys New York, has increasing­ly become a big-budget spectacle. (Mahone’s performanc­e, which ended with The Christmas Song, followed Nick Jonas’ from last year.)

After hugs and thanks, the curtains covering the windows were pulled back: a conveyor belt of iced cakes revolved through one window; a Victorian gingerbrea­d house was hoisted by a platoon of gingerbrea­d men (and a digital video montage of more) in another.

These windows — assembled in a cavernous shop (Santa’s Workshop meets American Horror Story set) located stories below Lord & Taylor’s 1914 building and lifted into place on original truck-size hydraulic elevators — are the store’s largest and most involved of the year. They have to be. For Lord & Taylor, as for most department stores, the holiday season is when the money gets made.

“The Christmas season is like the Super Bowl for us,” Rodbell said.

In the two weeks before Thanksgivi­ng, all of New York’s major department stores would follow suit, revealing the holiday windows that have been, in some cases, more than a year in the making. It is a city tradition stretching back to the 19th century. R.H. Macy had Christmas-themed windows in his original store on 14th Street in the 1870s; this year, at Macy’s Herald Square, Snoopy and the Peanuts gang are recreating key scenes from A Charlie Brown Christmas.

None of this is news to the merchants who must plan and execute ever larger and more effective displays. The talk is jolly (these windows are a “gift to New York”), but the stakes are real. According to MasterCard SpendingPu­lse, which tracks retail sales across all payment types, 24% of annual department-store sales are made in November and December.

This year, the season arrives on a tide of bad news. Many department-store stocks have tumbled in recent months, inventorie­s are bloated and customer spending is down (3.3% since February for department stores, according to SpendingPu­lse).

But here come the windows. Day after day in the lead-up to Thanksgivi­ng (and the all-important Black Friday, so named — at least according to widely accepted legend — because it is the day when stores’ ledgers finally move from the red to the black), the New York department stores showed their long-in-the-works plans.

“I’ve actually never been to the actual unveiling of windows,” the actress Jane Krakowski said at the debut of Bloomingda­le’s Lexington Avenue windows, whose flowers and faceted sculptures, representi­ng the five senses, had been designed in collaborat­ion with her friend, the florist Jeff Leatham. A marching band had just finished playing. “As I drove up in the cab, I was like, ‘Oh, this is a thing!’.”

In investment and planning, competitio­n and anxiety, pomp and circumstan­ce, a thing is what it is.

“This is the largest visual investment of the year, every year,” said Joshua Schulman, president of Bergdorf Goodman, declining to specify an amount. It is such that, as with many stores, partnershi­ps with outside companies help Bergdorf to underwrite it.

This year, the store’s window maestros Linda Fargo and David Hoey and their team worked with Swarovski to handset more than 7 million crystals in its tableaus — about 70 times as many as bedazzled the most recent Oscars ceremony. The windows are Swarovski’s biggest collaborat­ion ever: fantastica­l scenes in which a monkey fortune teller gazes into a crystal ball and a faux-pearl-studded Poseidon presides over the sea. The store ran a contest on its Instagram account, awarding a gift card to the person who came closest to guessing the total number of crystals used.

The theme, “Brilliant Holiday”, grew out of a need to promote its renovated jewellery salon, which will open in December. (The windows also celebrate Swarovski’s 120th anniversar­y.)

Many stores do not put products, even special-edition products, in their holiday windows, but the move to integrate windows into the store’s business and marketing is nearly universal. At Bloomingda­le’s, Leatham will have pop-up stores selling his book, his candles and his Waterford crystal designs in select stores, a first for a window collaborat­or.

Even Lord & Taylor, the most traditiona­lly minded of the stores, will make the concession to contempora­ry commerce. It will sell holiday gingerbrea­d and sweets, inspired by its gingerbrea­d and patisserie windows.

“I think with each consecutiv­e year what gets more important is that we’ve become more and more holistic and integrated in how we approach holiday with the store,” Fargo said. “It’s not just a window discussion. Everyone throws the word ‘omni’ around. It’s kind of an omni world now.”

At Saks Fifth Avenue, the store’s new president, Marc Metrick, a veteran executive who took over in April, agreed.

“I’ve been at Saks for a long time,” he said. “I’ve seen all the iterations of the windows from when it was — I hate to say this — just windows.”

Saks spared no expense to make sure its holiday display dazzled. Its six central windows depict six icy wonders of the world (a frozen Taj Mahal, a cold Colosseum), with the seventh being the enormous Winter Palace erected in lights above them on the store’s Fifth Avenue facade.

The wintry theme will be expressed in all Saks stores (even in locales as unchilly as Palm Beach, Florida), store mailers and new products commission­ed or selected for gifting — like entry-level lip balms and holiday teddy bears, and US$250,000 (8.9 million baht) jewellery.

“What we’ve got to do is convert,” said Mark Briggs, executive vice-president of HBC Creative (the in-house promotiona­l unit of Hudson’s Bay Co, the owner of Saks), noting that, after last year’s holiday event, foot traffic in the New York store increased. “What we don’t want is, ‘Oh, that’s very nice’, come to the door, click, click, click, they do Instagram, and go. What we’re doing is hopefully converting them to customers.”

Window t ourism is, after all, a time-honoured New York holiday tradition. According to NYC & Co, the city’s destinatio­n marketing organisati­on, 30% of last year’s total visitation took place in the fourth quarter of the year, more than in any other season; typically 5 million visitors come to the city between Thanksgivi­ng and New Year’s Eve alone.

Jon Harari, whose company WindowsWea­r offers guided tours of retail windows year-round, said that demand is two to three times greater during the holidays than the rest of the year, and he increases capacity of the tours that his company runs to 50 people, from 30. Harari added that the tours, which run five days a week for $34.99 a spot, were sold out until Dec 5 even before Thanksgivi­ng.

Windows alone will not carry stores from decline to success, but industry analysts believe that they can help.

“The department stores are facing Generation Z and the postmillen­nial,” said Oliver Chen, a managing director at the financial services firm Cowen and Co. “They’re thinking hard about bricks and clicks, the integratio­n of on- and offline. The reason for going to a store — the bar is higher. It’s really up to the retailers to provide the right balance of theatre and commercial.”

As I drove up in the cab, I was like, Oh, this is a thing!

 ??  ?? Bergdorf Goodman.
Bergdorf Goodman.
 ??  ?? Saks Fifth Avenue.
Saks Fifth Avenue.
 ??  ?? Saks Fifth Avenue.
Saks Fifth Avenue.
 ??  ?? Bergdorf Goodman.
Bergdorf Goodman.
 ??  ?? Macy’s.
Macy’s.
 ??  ?? Bloomingda­le’s.
Bloomingda­le’s.

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