Monday, January 31, 2011

Apparel Articles


Organic Cotton Strong Despite Recession

http://www.apparelnews.net/features/special_reports/011211-Organic-Cotton-Strong-Despite-Recession

Organic cotton sales have been picking up in this past year of 2010, according to Textile Exchange's new "Organic Farm and Fiber". Organic cotton now holds 1.1 percent of the world's cotton production, pushing the global cotton output from about 210,000 metric tons to 241,276 metric tons. The report also goes further to estimate that roughly 274,000 farmers in 23 countries are growing organic cotton. The US is the 5th largest supplier.  

South Coast Plaza Beefs Up Store Roster

http://www.apparelnews.net/news/retailing/012111-South-Coast-Plaza-Beefs-Up-Store-Roster

South Coast Plaza is starting the new year right with a batch of new stores. The mall, which has been open for 44 years now and built by the Segerstrom familyThe stores that will be new to the mall are Brunello Cucinelli, a high-end men’s and women’s cashmere brand; Diane von Fursternberg, contemporary women’s fashion from the New York designer; Longchamp, the Parisian label that makes luxury tote bags, luggage and accessories; Madewell, the J. Crew subsidiary that has an array of edgier T-shirts, denim, footwear and accessories; and Omega, the Swiss watchmaker. Also, a new large format XXI Forever by Forever 21 is taking over part of the sears during this year.

 

 Quality is Key at Kingpin's L.A.

http://www.apparelnews.net/news/tradeshows/012811-Quality-Is-Key-at-Kingpins-LA

Major denim designers attended the Kingpins Boutique denim sourcing show in downtown Los Angeles Jan. 25–26 in search of the desired quality and styles of denim for their Fall 2012 offerings.
The brands that were in attendance were Civilianaire, Juicy Couture, J Brand, Citizens of Humanity, Goldsign, Adriano Goldschmied, Rock & Republic, BCBG, Target and Element. In the new year, many denim designers quoted average price increases of 10 percent and 15 percent, depending on the product due to the price rise of denim. Now, a year after cotton began its climb, brands have plans in place to deal with paying nearly double for denim fabric. Luckily for designers, research shows that despite the rise in cost of denim products, consumers haven't been scared off yet and continue to buy denim. The steep cotton prices do seem to be inspiring Southern California’s premium-denim designers to create no-frills, super-clean, vintage-inspired jeans, vendors said. 

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