We are all familiar with luxury brands such as Versace,
Prada, Diesel and Giorgio Armani. These brands create finely crafted,
highly coveted, and very expensive pieces. We know they are costly
and luxurious, but do we understand the classification that the apparel
industry would assign such brands.
The apparel industry has many terms to classify various
elements such as garment price points. In all honesty, it can get
rather confusing. In an effort to help make this issue a tad big more
manageable, Apparel Search has created the following price point definition
guide.
Here is a quick test to see if you need to review our
guide. If this following paragraph presents confusion to you,
you may want to try our guide:
“Just as luxury refers to a very high-end class
of brands, contemporary refers to a segment of designer brands.
It falls below luxury and along the same level as bridge, which is
a segment that features secondary, lower-priced lines by luxury designers
using lower-priced fabrics. From there lies the moderate category,
which includes lines like Levi's, and budget, which consists of mass
market brands like Forever 21 and H&M. Lastly, you have the off-price
category, which includes discounted pieces, off-season fashion and close-out
pieces from retailers .”
Fashion Industry Price Point Classifications
Budget or mass market
- The low end of the apparel spectrum with clothes, footwear, and accessories
that retail at relatively low price points. Garments are typically
at fair quality and at fair value. Often casual sportswear such as
jeans and T-shirts falls into this category. However, the clothing
category is not the primary issue at hand. For example, not all jeans
or tees would qualify. Keep in mind that these
silhouettes can be
designed by high end designers and would too expensive to be for budget
or mass market. It is important to think of the brand in addition
to the garment type. Mass market apparel sometimes is a knockoff of
higher priced designer items. When we say “knockoffs”, we refer
to clothing with similar appearance but are sold at popular prices to the
masses. It is important to note that “typically” the quality would
be lower along with the price. The “mass market” segment received
its name because it serves the “masses” (has a large consumer base).
The mass market and budget driven stores typically buy in large quantities
so they are able to keep retail prices low. Many designers are starting
to turn to mass market retailers such as Target to introduce lower-priced,
but well-styled merchandise: Cynthia Rowley, Todd Oldham, Liz Lange, Isaac
Mizrahi are a few. Old Navy, Cherokee, and Mossimo are a few popular
budget labels. Product sold at mass market is intended for broad
consumption. Product is often derivations of popular styles and staples.
This is the lowest price classification in which one would find advertised
brand names. Prices are below average. Promotion of this price range to
consumers is often based on value. Retailers in this space typically
work on high volume and low profit margins.
Discount or Off-price
– Low priced merchandise. This price range may include samples, close-outs,
discontinued, season items or irregulars. The clothing could have
been at any price originally, but is retailing for less now. Outlet
malls or stores like Ross are example of off-price retailers selling a mixture
of discount labels. This category contains two primary sources of
merchandise. The first kind are produced specifically for the discount
market. The second sort of discount goods is clothes that have been
sold in the off price market because the items didn’t sell at the originally
intended price point category. Some designers move down to discount
price points if their brand is becoming less sought after than it had been
in the past. There are a broad range of discount stores. Some
sell goods that are very low priced such as dollar stores and other discounters
such as TJ Maxx sell moderate. Other discounters sell bridge
or contemporary. Discount is difficult to categorize because a discounter
can sell a wide variety of classifications. They can sell moderate,
better, bridge, designers, etc., as long as it is done at a reduced price.
Moderate
- Dresses, sportswear, career wear and nationally advertised apparel brands
fit into this price point category. Companies such as Nine West, Levi’s,
Gap, Van Heusen, and Land's End are all in the moderate range. Medium
priced merchandise which is a step above budget. This is the price
classification that majority of clothing and footwear fall into. The
majority of Children's wear labels also fall into this category. Many
fashion labels straddle this category. Retailers such as Dillard’s
and Macy’s maybe considered to be a moderate department store although their
women’s wear and men’s wear can hit contemporary and better price points. The
bulk of sportswear falls into moderate category.
Contemporary
- This price range is also referred to as Popular. Contemporary
means belonging to the same period of time. Conforming to modern or
current ideas in style, fashion, design, etc. Contemporary
- More of a fashion-forward look, than just a specific price point. This
classification is often aimed at women in their '20s and early '30s who
are looking for trendy apparel, but at an affordable (at least compared
to designer) price. BCBG, Bisou Bisou, Betsey Johnson, XOXO, Isabel
Ardee and Rebecca Taylor are all considered contemporary lines.
Contemporary fashion usually refers to modern, hip or in. However
it also means the style of a certain time. So the contemporary fashion of
a decade ago would differ from the contemporary fashion of a century ago.
More of a fashion-forward look, than just a specific price
point. This classification is often aimed at women in their '20s and early
'30s who are looking for trendy apparel, but at an affordable price. A
great contemporary brand is one with a unique look and feel. Although
similar or higher than Better in regard to pricing, Contemporary implies
the latest in new styling. Sort of avante-garde and trendy (The
avant-garde pushes the boundaries of what is accepted as the norm or the
status quo, primarily in the cultural realm). This category
is clearly targeted for younger fashion-forward consumers, sizing is typically
limited to juniors and misses. Contemporary is currently one of the
hottest categories. It represents street wear and trendy fashion
conscience merchandise, at below Bridge pricing. This is possibly
one of the fastest growing pricing categories in the industry.
Better
- Medium to higher priced merchandise. Sportswear, coordinates
and dresses may all appear in better lines. Jones New York, Perry
Ellis and Anne Klein are two examples of a better-priced line. The
fabrics, styling, and craftsmanship are of better quality than lower-priced
items. These products are slightly higher profile lines that are found
in department stores. Promotion of this price range to consumers is
often based on an implied high standard of quality. This is usually
the lowest price point category for what consumers consider a “designer”
line such as Liz Claiborne or Jones New York. It is important to keep
in mind that a “designer” name brand may have a stable of similarly named
labels designed to hit varying price points. A designer may have brands
in the Better category, but also other similar brands in another category. The
Better category is the cut off point for children’s apparel. Some
kids brands venture into better and some brands actually go higher. But
most childrenswear lines are moderate or lower.
Bridge
- A "bridge" between better and designer, this category is often for career
separates and dresses in finer fabrics. Bridge is usually the lower
priced or secondary lines of
fashion designers. Bridge products have the look of designer
products but are made from less expensive fabrics. Examples are Lauren
by Ralph Lauren, Donna Karan's DKNY line, Emmanuel Ungaro's
Emmanuel line and JOE for Joseph Abboud. Ellen Tracy and Dana Buchman
may also fall into this range. There is a large amount of competition
in this apparel price range category.
Designer - Designer products cater to the high priced prestige or luxury market. True designer collections often sell at a rather steep price point (meaning; expensive). The fabrics, construction, detailing and trimming are usually superior to other ready-to-wear items. At this level, the designer can give free reign to creativity without too much concern to cost as in a bridge line. Designer clothing usually sells in specialty boutiques, or boutique sections in fine department stores. Examples of designer clothing are Gucci, Prada, Versace, Balenciaga, Marc Jacobs, Joseph Abboud, Bill Blass, Calvin Klein, and Oscar de la Renta. This category includes the RTW (Ready to Wear) lines of haute couture designers such as Chanel and Issey Miyake, etc. Designer Clothing is usually the product into which a designer pours his or her heart and soul. Although most of these designers produce a bridge collection as well, the designer collection is usually tagged specifically with the designers name. For example, the "Giorgio Armani Collection". There is a distinct difference in price and garment construction between designer and bridge although both may appear to carry the same designer name.
Haute Couture
and Made-to-Measure – Couture and Made-to-Measure are similar but
different. Haute Couture is limited to syndicate members producing
made to measure pieces. If a fashion designer is not a syndicate
member, they are not technically a Haute Couturier designer. Learn
more
about syndicate membership at the Mode A Paris website. Made-to-Measure
is clothing that is manufactured specifically for one person. It is
cut & sewn specifically for their body dimensions.
Made-to-measure apparel or couture costs tens of thousands
of dollars and only a handful of clients can afford it. The
highest priced garments carry the classification of couture. The literal
French translation is, “The finest dressmaking”. These are mostly
original designs, handmade, measured and cut to fit an individual's specific
body measurements. In many cases, couture designs are one-of-a-kinds
and usually run several to tens of thousands of dollars in price. This
is the absolute upper-end of the market. Couture
often gets exposure for a designer through magazine layouts and from celebrities
who wear the creations in public. Chanel Couture is an example of
a haute couture label.
Do you know the
difference between Haute Couture (Made-to-Measure) and Ready to Wear (RTW)?
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