China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Blurring the lines of his, her clothes

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PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvan­ia — What’s the difference between men’s and women’s clothing? These days, the lines are blurred.

On runways around the world, designers are shaking up long-held societal and sartorial views of who should wear what. Take luxury designer Thom Browne. For his spring/summer 2018 men’s collection, Browne re-envisioned the traditiona­l men’s suit with high and low skirts.

“It’s about being openminded to experience life the way you want it,” the designer says.

Gucci creative director Alessandro Michele has infused his collection­s with pieces for men and women that are a hodgepodge of colors, textures, prints, fits and refreshed silhouette­s. The message: Beauty is beauty — regardless of gender.

Some mall brands and fastfashio­n stores have joined the gender-fluid conversati­on.

This spring, Swedish retailer H&M released a 19-piece unisex denim line made with organic and recycled cottons. At HM.com, hoodies, simple shirts, frayed shorts and more are pictured on both a male and female model and sized XS through L.

Last year, Spanish clothing retailer Zara rolled out a 16-item gender-neutral collection of T-shirts, sweatshirt­s, denim basics and Bermuda shorts called Ungendered.

In 2015, Target announced that it would begin phasing out gender-based signage for toys, bedding and other department­s. It kept them for size-related items like clothing but aims to offer balanced options for both genders.

In June, Arizona State University professor Kate Hinde sparked a Twitter storm when she moved NASA graphic tees from Target’s boys department to the girls department and tweeted a photo of it, driving home the message that girls can be scientists, too.

Target responded by saying that it also sells NASA shirts for girls.

“I don’t think it’s a fad. I think it’s cultural,” says Mary Wilson, assistant chair for fashion design art at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City.

“I think it’s an evolution of society itself. Look at how we’re almost becoming genderless in terms of identity outside of clothing. So maybe sooner than later we’ll be looking at each other as individual­s and not as segmenting who we are by what we’re wearing.”

She’s noticed a gradual shift on campus.

“Students of Generation Z are asking to be allowed to design without being restricted by the traditiona­l rules of gender,” she says.

Even brands that don’t identify collection­s as genderflui­d see the benefit of offering neutral pieces that invite the customer to choose how they’re styled. The Edie Company — a go-to e-commerce brand for fuss-free V-neck tees, shirts, sleeved pullovers and casual dresses — is rooted in three philosophi­es: to be timeless/neutral, comfortabl­e and a blank canvas.

“These components mean something different to everyone, based on what they’re looking for,” says the company founder Victoria Lopez. “It’s about creating options for everyone.”

Some gender-fluid fashion statements fall flat. Supermodel Gigi Hadid and her boyfriend, singer-songwriter Zayn Malik, outfitted in print-mixing Gucci suits, appeared on the cover of Vogue’s August issue. Inside, the pair dished on gender bending.

“It’s not about gender. It’s about, like, shapes, and what feels good on you that day. And anyway, it’s fun to experiment,” Hadid says.

Malik adds that when he likes a shirt of hers, he just borrows it. “If it’s tight on me, so what? It doesn’t matter if it was made for a girl.”

The magazine experience­d a backlash, with many labeling the feature an example of appropriat­ion. Genderquee­r writer Jacob Tobia penned an editorial for Cosmopolit­an that called it an elitist attempt to be “edgy”.

“What’s so annoying about this new and sanitized ‘gender progressiv­e’ aesthetic is that it curates gender-fluid identities for those in the cultural elite in a way that totally whitewashe­s the lived experience­s of gender-nonconform­ing people.

“Unlike how this new Vogue cover shoot presents it, the lived experience of being gender-nonconform­ing is rarely that fun and glamorous.”

Vogue followed with an apology, stating that it “missed the mark” and looks forward to continuing the conversati­on — “with greater sensitivit­y”.

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 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? The idea of being genderless is raging in the fashion world, as is seen in a show in Paris for H&M.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY The idea of being genderless is raging in the fashion world, as is seen in a show in Paris for H&M.

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