LINGERIE — or ladies' private clothing, underwear — has become a
full member of the fashion establishment. Pretty or fashionable lingerie
is no longer something worn only for special occasions. It has become
an everyday staple and women like to update it as often as they update
their clothes.
"The industry is very competitive now," says Michael Gazal, the head
of the Australian underwear producer Gazal Group. "Everybody's looking
for an edge."
Increasingly, that "edge" is a brand's ability to adapt to the new
clothing landscape. Lingerie companies, like fashion houses, design
seasonal collections based on themes. Many now use catwalk shows to
unveil new collections.
"Things started to change in the mid 1980s," Gazal explains. "Women
started to look at lingerie as part of fashion, rather than just a necessity.
Now, the people who design lingerie are really fashion designers. They
go to a lot of trouble to come up with new fabrics, laces and colours."
Bendon was one of the first companies to produce "fashion lingerie"
on a mass scale, with its Elle Macpherson Intimates range, in Australia.
That made it accessible to millions of women who previously shied away
from the high price tags of premium labels.
"Twenty-five years ago, you had one type of bra you wore all of the
time and you only bought a new one when the old one wore out," Sue Dunmore,
Bendon's designer explains. "Now you wear a certain bra to play sport,
another to the office and a different one out to a club."
Fashion trends not only influence the look of today's lingerie, they
have created new categories for the industry. In the past decade in
particular, there has been big growth in the number of new styles based
on what women wear on the outside.
For example, their love of tight-fitting T-shirts spawned the best-selling
(nipple concealing) contour bra. Women's willingness to show their cleavage
has resulted in many push-up and padded styles.
Technology, too, has played a major role in the bra wars. As fabric
and design developments become more sophisticated, companies are racing
to add "exclusive" high-tech features to their products.
But most of the stranger products are being bought by men. They pass
up cotton, comfort and elegance and head straight for the tasteless
styles.
US-based market research firm the NPD Group has studied the subject.
It found a difference between men and women when it comes to tiny undergarments.
"A lot of the women say, with disgust, 'This is what my husband thinks
I'm all about?' Or, 'I can't believe you really want me to wear this,'"
one NPD researcher says.
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