Historical lingerie seller looks to seduce a buyer
June 5, 2012 by admin
Filed under Latest Lingerie News
LOS ANGELES — Sex doesn’t always sell, and that’s a problem plaguing racy lingerie retailer Frederick’s of Hollywood Group Inc.
Frederick’s of Hollywood introduced Americans to the push-up bra after World War II and pioneered the concept of sexy undergarments. But for the past two decades, its skimpy outfits have failed to entice shoppers to its stores or to its mail-order business. Now the company is taking come-ons from potential buyers.
With competition from retailers such as Victoria’s Secret, four straight years of financial losses and shares trading around 30 cents, Frederick’s has hired investment bank Allen Co. to explore strategic moves, “including but not limited to a sale of the company or a business combination,” the company announced recently.
The company has received multiple inquiries over the last six months from possible partners including private equity firms, said Frederick’s Chief Executive Thomas Lynch.
The problem has been seducing customers, Lynch said. “My challenge now is reintroducing folks to the brand today and showing them we have a great product. The problem is, I haven’t had the balance sheet to go out and tell people, ‘Hey, check out what’s going on.’ “
Frederick’s is famous for its racy image, marketing products such as its Hollywood Exxtreme Cleavage bra and Captivating Lace Babydoll online and at its mostly mall-based stores.
Customers at its flagship store on Hollywood Boulevard are greeted by scantily clad mannequins in come-hither poses. Racks of bright-colored corsets, chemises and teddies stand front and center. The storefront evokes the company’s signature red color scheme. Although some companies have emphasized everyday wearable undergarments, the Frederick’s line tilts more toward that of a boudoir costume shop, especially online, with Halloween-ready outfits including its French maid and Shanghai girl get-ups.
The company reported sales of $119.6 million in 2011, posting a loss of $12 million. Its full- and part-time staff numbered 1,922 in 2008; there are now 1,032 employees. It has 117 stores, including recently opened locations in the United Arab Emirates.
Outside the Hollywood store recently, Mount St. Mary’s College students Elizabeth Garza and Joanna Palma said the company’s wares tend to skew more toward women in their 30s.
Garza, 19, said Victoria’s Secret hooks a wider demographic with merchandise for shoppers ranging from teenagers to middle-aged women.
“When you’re young and trying to be sexy, it’s not as serious” as when you’re older, Garza said.
Victoria’s Secret has dominated sales of lingerie the past two decades by turning it into an everyday fashion statement rather than a bedroom novelty, said Richard Jaffe, a retail analyst at Stifel Nicolaus Co. “Victoria’s Secret never really got into the whole indoor sports apparel kind of game,” Jaffe said.
With competitors including American Eagle’s Aerie brand, the Gap, HM and others entering the marketplace in recent decades, Frederick’s has had a hard time differentiating itself.
Frederick’s had been the Victoria’s Secret of its time. Inspired by a World War II pin-up, the late Frederick Mellinger opened a lingerie business in New York in 1946 and the next year moved it to Los Angeles. Renamed Frederick’s of Hollywood, the company soon became famous for its mail-order catalogs featuring curvy models.
But it earned a sleazier image as it became as well-known for racy undergarments and sex toys as for push-up bras, panties and corsets. Mellinger died in 1990 and his family sold its interest in the company in 1997 to an investment bank that took the company private. The company declared bankruptcy in 2000, having been trounced by competitors such as Limited Brands’ Victoria’s Secret. Frederick’s emerged from bankruptcy in 2003 and went public in 2006. It long ago dropped the sex toys business.
Success in the apparel retail sector requires constant reinvention, and Frederick’s hasn’t adjusted to trends, said retail analyst Ron Friedman of Marcum LLC. “It all starts with management and how you market your product,” he said, “and they really haven’t stayed current with the times.”
Friedman said even companies such as Macy’s, which lost customers during the recession, rebounded when the economy started improving. The trick for a retailer is knowing your customer, and Frederick’s hasn’t done that, he said. “There’s no reason Frederick’s couldn’t be successful if they knew who their customer was.”
Shopping at the Glendale (Calif.) Galleria, Miriam Pichardo said she frequents Frederick’s and Victoria’s Secret. Frederick’s reputation doesn’t dissuade her.
“It’s the idea that some people find it more dirty, more sexual, or whatever,” she said. “For me, I don’t care. I’ll shop anywhere.”
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Lingerie for hot shots: The ‘Flashbang’ bra with a hand gun holster
June 5, 2012 by admin
Filed under Latest Lingerie News
By
Kristie Lau
11:42 EST, 5 June 2012
|
11:47 EST, 5 June 2012
A bra fitted with a gun holster is on sale thanks to an ingenious design by a law enforcement supplier from Oklahoma.
The Flashbang bra is attached with a thermoplastic shell that is able to store one of more than 20 hand gun styles already on the market.
Lisa Looper, owner of Looper Law Enforcement which is a company that produces ‘concealed carry gear’, came up with the design to give her the ability to defend herself ‘at a moment’s notice’.
Scroll down for video
Clever: The Flashbang bra, pictured above, is able to store a single handgun as it is attached with a ‘thermoplastic shell’. The shell has been made to store various hand gun designs. It is now available online
It offers a modern-day take on traditional female self-defense systems such as the garter belt holster made popular in American Old Western films of the early Forties.
Mrs Looper, a mother of two, told ABC: ‘I really never intended to create a holster line, that was never something
that I wanted to do. I just did this for myself but as I was talking to
other women, they were like “oh my gosh, this is great, I have the same
problem.’
‘It was kind of like, where can I put this thing so it won’t show,’ she continued.
She found that a woman’s bra was the most logical place to place a gun, where women can simply yank at a handle on the holster to release the weapon.
Details: The bra is fitted with a shell (above) that clips itself around a hand gun in able to safely store it
She said: ‘Women have this natural little overhang here and it’s a great spot to tuck a gun.’
The garment’s slogan reads: ‘Nothing comes between a girl and her gun’.
She added: ‘[You] can’t get to the phone and call 911 all the time, you know you need to be able to defend yourself.’
It is said that the average time it takes to draw the gun from the bra, which retails for $40 online, and fire the gun is 1.5seconds.
An eBay account that is selling the design comes with further details.
Designer: Lisa Looper (above), the owner of a law enforcement supply company in Oklamhoma, came up with the design in order to give her the ability to defend herself at any given moment
Snappy: Mrs Looper demonstrates how quickly a woman is able to pull the gun out from her bra design
It reads: ‘Statistics show that most
gunfights last about 2.5 seconds, there are multiple attackers over
80per cent of the time, and the fight will be in extreme close quarters,
usually within touching distance.’
‘You need the ability to draw and
fire as soon as possible without alerting the suspect to your intentions
until they receive your gun fire,’ the spiel continues. ‘Weapon retention is
paramount, meaning purse carry is rarely a viable solution.’
For the fashion-conscious, the bra comes in a range of colours, including hot pink, nude and black, as well as sizes.
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I think it’s a good idea for protection these day with cannibals and other criminals running around..
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BANG BANG BOING!
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A pistol amongst the bazookas?
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A monumental mistake as anyone going for the gun has to entangle her own hand in her shirt to get it. IF the attacker is close you’re potentially alrerady half bound for him. I’ve had a concealed carry permitt for years and there is nothing worse than a weapon too difficult to get to.
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Interesting choice of story when you consider that the Brits aren’t allowed to own guns for self defence. That option is available only to the ruling classes who made themselves exempt from gun legislation.
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great…they are just giving TSA a reason to ban bras on planes.
That will be interesting to watch as women are made to take off their bras before boarding planes.
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When did she take the safety off, or did she put a loaded gun in her bra with the safety off?
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But WHY?! Bras are uncomfortable enough as is!
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great…they are just giving TSA a reason to ban bras on planes.
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