CBC Edition

Aritzia doesn't have private mirrors in its fitting rooms, and many people don't like it

- Natalie Stechyson

For better or worse, Ar‐ itzia has been enjoying a moment in the sun.

The Canadian retailer is "the hottest fashion chain in the U.S.," Bloomberg said in January, after U.S. sales surged 78 per cent in the last year.

And on TikTok, where Gen Z fashionist­as show off their hauls, #aritzia videos have more than 1.7 billion views. (Videos about its famous Su‐ per Puff jackets have more than 58.9 million, alone).

But with fame comes scrutiny, and the "everyday luxury" retailer has been com‐ ing under fire online for, among other things, its mir‐ rorless fitting rooms, which force those trying on clothes to walk into a communal mir‐ rored area staffed with sales associates if they want to see how they look.

It's a "fashion show against your will," said one TikTokker.

"It is a very demeaning ex‐ perience," Pamela Rutledge, an expert on psychology and the media, told CBC News.

"It's actually very disre‐ spectful to the customer. [Ar‐ itzia] may be trying to be edgy or modern, or emphasize that it's not about the body, but they're actually doing exactly the opposite."

Mirrorless for some 40 years

Such complaints are not new. In 2012, one woman told The Globe and Mail she'd nev‐ er felt insecure about her curves until she tried on clothes in front of the com‐ munal mirror in Aritzia's Man‐ hattan store.

"There's a woman who's a size 24 [waist] trying on the same shorts," she said. "You're forced to compare yourself."

An Artzia spokespers­on says the communal approach has been a "core component of its customer experience for almost 40 years." The compa‐ ny was founded in Vancouver

in 1984.

They allow "a high level of support from our style advi‐ sors, including personaliz­ed styling insight, in a welcoming environmen­t that cultivates a sense of community," the spokespers­on said in a state‐ ment.

"Our primary goal is for every client to feel supported during their visits."

WATCH | Aritzia's big ex‐ pansion plans:

Sales tactic

Matthew Philp, an assis‐ tant professor in marketing at Toronto Metropolit­an Uni‐ versity, sees it as a sales and marketing tactic.

Getting a customer out of the change room gives poten‐ tially two groups of people — the employees and whoever the person may be shopping with — the opportunit­y to convince that person to buy the items.

Plus, because retailers want customers to showcase their products online, the lighting and atmosphere of the communal area looks bet‐ ter in photos and videos than the inside of a small change room, he said.

"Stores have become a lot more experienti­al, and stores like that likely put a lot more effort into the 'showroom' kind of atmosphere," Philp said.

"They're thinking of how this will look more online rather than how it looks specifical­ly on the person right then and there."

In its fourth quarter re‐ sults, posted in May, Aritzia said it plans more expansion in 2024, with eight new bou‐ tiques and four boutique ex‐ pansions or reposition­s, all in the U.S.

'Invites judgment'

In the comments on a video CBC posted about mir‐ rorless change rooms, some shoppers said they enjoyed or even preferred the experi‐ ence. A few said it's good mar‐ keting, others said they liked the space to move around and the good lighting.

"Many times I've seen items on others and asked for the same in my size," one per‐ son wrote.

But others said they didn't shop at Aritzia precisely be‐ cause of its change rooms.

"Their sizing runs small and anyone above a Size 10 may not want to risk a walk of shame if it's ill-fitting," anoth‐ er person wrote.

Emerging from a dressing room can be very triggering for someone with anxiety or an eating disorder, said Dr. Susan Albers, a clinical psy‐ chologist who specialize­s in body image. People tend to judge themselves in compari‐ son to others, she said, and standing next to someone can taint or skew how you see yourself.

"When we look into a mir‐ ror with other people around us, it invites judgment and the opinions of other people. It doesn't give us the luxury or the privacy to tune into our own opinion," Albers said.

If you find yourself un‐ comfortabl­e in a communal change room situation, Albers recommends you look around and see who else is there before you get changed, so you're prepared. Take a deep breath when you emerge, and take note of how the outfit makes you feel be‐ fore you get a visual, she added.

"Tune into yourself and trust your own judgment."

And if you're really uncom‐ fortable, Aritzia says you can still ask for a mirror — all stores offer at least one fitting room with either a perma‐ nent or roll-in mirror.

"Asking for a mirror is al‐ most more embarrassi­ng than the communal mirrors tho," one person wrote in a comment with more than 6,000 likes on a popular Tik‐ Tok video.

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