Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

HOW CROCS WENT FROM UGLY TO COOL IN 2020

- BY M A X BERLINGER

IN L A T E October, Crocs, the Coloradoba­sed brand known for its lightweigh­t and bulbous clogs, reported its quarterly earnings. It was a stark contrast to other fashion brands hobbled by the ongoing pandemic — think J. Crew and Brooks Brothers, two gentlemen’s clothiers from another era that both filed for bankruptcy protection this year.

This time, Crocs had a reason to celebrate: Revenue was $361.7 million, an increase of 15.7% over the last year, blowing past Wall Street prediction­s. And the brand was riding high on a string of well-publicized collaborat­ions with popular food brands and musicians including Justin Bieber and Bad Bunny.

It goes without saying that 2020 has been an immensely strange year, but few could predict that Crocs, once looked down upon by the fashion cognoscent­i, would experience such a high-profile ascent. “We can’t believe it either,” read a headline from GQ magazine. “Crocs are cool now.” That sentiment — of surprise, of slack-jawed wonder — has been echoed widely by the media in outlets ranging from Slate and the Wall Street Journal to the streetwear website Highsnobie­ty.

However, if you take a step back, there is perhaps no better item than Crocs to encapsulat­e the transition­ary period the fashion industry finds itself in right now. Crocs, cumbersome and unwieldy, sit at the overlap of a few cresting movements: the pandemicin­spired emphasis on comfort, the obsession with making unattracti­ve things covetable, and the way the internet has made style less about looking good and more about irony and humor.

“2020 was the perfect storm for Crocs,” said Ben Jacobs, brand director of the shoe resale site Stadium Goods. “The brand capitalize­d on the playful characteri­stics of the foam clog with high-profile collaborat­ors including Alife, Chinatown Market and Post Malone, which helped gain respect from more serious sneaker enthusiast­s. That coupled with the pandemic that has kept everybody inside, Crocs turned the unusual into a comfortabl­e stunt-at-home staple.”

For what it’s worth, Crocs is seeing the fruitful bloom of seeds it planted years ago. As far back as 2017, Crocs was making inroads into the high-fashion universe thanks to a collaborat­ion with British designer Christophe­r Kane that produced

Crocs in a marble print and covered in rough stones as well as one with avantgarde label Balenciaga, which made Pepto Bismolpink platform versions of Crocs.

More recently, Crocs has savvily leveraged celebrity, a fact that became especially clear this year with the inclusion of collaborat­ive shoes from musicians of different genres: Bieber (pop), Bad Bunny (rap/ reggaeton), Luke Combs (country) and Post Malone (hip-hop/R&B). Footwear from these limited-edition collection­s quickly sell and often reemerge on resale sites at inflated prices, an indication of their cultural cachet.

StockX, the popular resale site, released its end-of-year wrap-up that saw a 750% increase in the sales of Crocs, which, on average, sold for $132 — a 125% increase over their retail price.

“I think Crocs is actually in a pretty unique position for an influencer- and collaborat­ion-heavy brand,” said Amy Rogoff Dunn, a partner at the consulting agency Kelton. “While other brands develop these partnershi­ps to create aspiration, Crocs seems to have developed them to grant permission — permission for people to go ahead and wear the shoe they want. They’re not saying, ‘Wear these shoes, and you’ll be like Bad Bunny,’ and instead [are] saying, ‘If you were worried about wearing these shoes, don’t worry because Bad Bunny wears them.’ ”

While leveraging the hype surroundin­g celebritie­s is commonplac­e these days, Crocs was shrewd to look beyond traditiona­l partners. It’s a shoe that is, to many, unconventi­onal, and so were some of its most buzzed-about partnershi­ps. It collaborat­ed on fried chicken-printcover­ed clogs with Kentucky Fried Chicken and a Peeps version that featured “jibbitz” (Crocs speak for charms you put in the shoe’s many holes) of the edible marshmallo­w chicks.

Crocs footwear has long been criticized for being ugly. The shoe, due to its featherlig­ht constructi­on, is a favorite of on-their-feet-all-day laborers including chefs and hospital workers.

Today their inelegant looks are seen as a benefit.

What changed? The paradigm of what is cool shifted, and Crocs are emblematic of the way young people no longer respond to traditiona­l notions of beauty and glamour (do TikTok teens want to wear frilly frocks or dapper suits?). Instead, younger generation­s are turning to a social media-led look that is casual and oftentimes silly. In other words, it’s fashion as memes.

“The most polarizing footwear style proves to be one of the world’s mostwanted products this year,” reported Lyst, the global fashion search platform. “Average monthly searches for Crocs total 135,000, and the brand hit its peak in the spring.”

All of which is to say that Crocs offers a product that is right for the moment, marketing initiative­s that have proved to be unexpected and messaging that resonates with a digital-savvy generation.

“People want moments of levity, and they want simple pleasures in this emotionall­y and financiall­y challengin­g time,” Dunn said. “Who better to deliver that than a brand that offers a product that really authentica­lly meets the moment via cheerful colors, relatively low price points and total comfort?”

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