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Plaid may help checkered retail sales

A little girl in blackwatch plaid dress. The check was first used by The Black Watch Royal Regiment of Scotland as a signature pattern in their uniforms.

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A tartan kilt. Many U.S. states now have their own official tartan.

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Kai Ryssdal: We're just on the leading edge of back to you-know-what season. Retailers are trying everything they can to pry the money out of consumers' hands before school starts. With the economy the way it is, they've basically got two choices. Mark-downs and must-haves. Retailers like that second one, of course, because they can still make a little money there. So this season they're pinning their hopes on a very familiar pattern. Marketplace's Stacey Vanek Smith reports.


STACEY VANEK-SMITH: After more than a year of being pounded by the recession, retailers think they've finally found the strategy for success...plaid.

Karolyn Wangstad: We're just kind of mad about plaid here.

Karolyn Wangstad is Vice President of trend for JCPenney. She says plaid is a pillar for the fall. She says it works for men and women, and you can put it on anything.

WANGSTAD: An assortment of tops, jackets, outer-wear, handbags, scarves, hats. You name it. We call it total plaidness around here. That's kind of our joke.

But this season, plaid is serious business. Adrienne Tennant is an apparel analyst with FBR Capital Markets. She says retailers are banking on plaid becoming a must have.

ADRIENNE TENNANT: It's very important to have something that will drive and generate that full-price sale. Because now we really have to get her off of bargain hunting.

Families are expected to spend about 8 percent less on back to school shopping than they did last year. Plaid fits into that pattern, too, says Wendy Liebmann CEO of WSL Strategic Retail. She says you can put the print on any fabric, from cashmere to cotton, so even cash-strapped shoppers can get their plaid on.

WENDY LIEBMANN: This sense of trying to make even the trend merchandise affordable has been really a mantra for most of the retailers around the country.

And some of us may not even have to buy anything, if we can just find those old flannel shirts, which are probably somewhere in the garage with our Nirvana posters, Doc Martens and fingerless gloves.

I'm Stacey Vanek-Smith for Marketplace.

About the author

Stacey Vanek Smith is a senior reporter for Marketplace, where she covers banking, consumer finance, housing and advertising.
Doug Philips's picture
Doug Philips - Aug 6, 2009

"Fashion" is the most ridiculous of consumer manipulation tools in existence. I'll take pains to remind your readers that at one point in our history, the polyester leisure suit was 'fashionable'.