Toronto Star

Death of skinny jeans greatly exaggerate­d

Weak competitio­n helps keep form-fitting pants at the top of retailers’ sales charts

- KIM BHASIN BLOOMBERG

Sorry, haters. Skinny jeans aren’t going away soon.

Figure-hugging denim has been a staple of women’s wardrobes since the mid-2000s. Even as different styles saw fashion booms and busts in recent years, nothing has truly threatened the supremacy of the skinny. It’s the essential style; all others are auxiliary.

Many have declared the death of the skinny jean. From influentia­l fashion blogs such as Who-What-Wear to Internet hotsheets such as BuzzFeed, skinny jeans are being called a fizzling trend.

Nonetheles­s, no single style has yet been able to gain a following sufficient to pressure the skinny — much less dethrone it — and it’s likely to be a while before one does. Perhaps it’s just wishful thinking.

“The skinny jeans trend just won’t die,” Jezebel lamented, back in 2014. Two years since, it still won’t.

According to March data from trend forecastin­g firm WGSN, skinny jeans make up 54 per cent of new full-price jean assortment­s in retail stores — the merchandis­e you see on typical store racks. No other style comes close.

“The skinny jean is not dead,” said Sidney Morgan-Petro, a retail analyst at WGSN. “It just has more competitio­n now.”

That competitio­n remains weak. Store shelves are actually selling fewer bootcut and boyfriend jeans than last year, at less than10 per cent each. While flares have seen a large increase, to 11 percent, it’s still nowhere close to unseating the skinny.

Slim fit jeans stand at 14 per cent. The closest rival is the cropped style, at 25 per cent.

But that particular cut overlaps with many others, including the skinny. (Skintight jeans that stop mid-calf count as both skinny and cropped, for instance.)

Most retailers, if not all, still bank on the skinny to drive sales volume because that’s what the masses demand.

Street and runway styles pushing wider jeans have yet to convince the populace to switch. For instance, a recent trend in ’70s clothes sparked a spike in flared jeans. The latest entrant is high-waisted flares cropped above the ankle, popularize­d by designer Rachel Comey. Fashion show catwalks last fall were chock-full of baggier denim, but the style was less prominent just one season later, according to WGSN’s runway show analysis.

It’s not for lack of effort. Shoppers have lately had more kinds of jeans to choose among, as stores try to drum up excitement for new styles while ensuring they don’t miss out on the next big thing. Some are worried that customers are bored with fashion because there simply hasn’t been much to be excited about.

Take Urban Outfitters. On a conference call with analysts this month, chief executive officer Richard Hayne said a fashion “malaise” has beset the industry.

Shoppers’ closets remain full of the various types of skinny bottoms that the company has continued to sell in the past decade.

“We’ve had all varieties of skinny: lowrise, highrise, colour, black, white, and print, washed, sanded, sliced and destroyed, yoga and active, leggings, jeggings, and stretch,” he said.

Lately, Urban Outfitters’ Free People label has tried to push wider bottoms in an effort to stay in front of fashion trends. They still haven’t caught on.

“Surely, a major fashion shift is the cure,” said Hayne. “I am not predicting exactly when that change will come, but I am certain it will.”

The top women’s style before the skinny proliferat­ed was the bootcut: denim that widened at the calf and engulfed the foot. But that was a long time ago.

For now, the skinny’s reign continues.

“At the end of the day, the skinny jean is still the top-selling, top-ranking, most stocked style,” said Morgan-Petro. “And it’s probably going to remain that way for some time.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Heidi Klum walks the red carpet wearing skinny jeans. Despite many prediction­s of the end of the fashion staple, retailers continue to bank on them to drive sales.
GETTY IMAGES Heidi Klum walks the red carpet wearing skinny jeans. Despite many prediction­s of the end of the fashion staple, retailers continue to bank on them to drive sales.

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