PRADA鈥橲 BOWLING shirt is so ugly the New Yorker called wearing it an act of 鈥減erformance art.鈥 The Frankenstein-style mash-up of garish prints, with a flame motif creeping up the bottom, costs $1,200 and happens to be the shirt of the summer, sported by actor Jeff Goldblum, rapper Pusha T, and street-style bloggers at fashion weeks around the world.
If that price raises eyebrows, consider this: A padded, boxier version with a banana pattern costs $500 more. Why would anyone pay $1,700 for it? Because the Prada banana is the stuff of legend, and if you didn鈥檛 know it, the shirt probably isn鈥檛 for you.
Prada SpA has returned to growth this year after three years of slipping sales and a collapse in profit. While much of the turnaround is due to a buoyant Chinese market that鈥檚 also lifted French luxury conglomerate LVMH and Gucci owner Kering SA, it鈥檚 also thanks to an effort to reinforce Prada鈥檚 unique brand identity. The label has reissued its most iconic products, including nylon belt bags, block-heeled loafers, comic-book images, and even more recent successes like the banana print.
Commenting on first-half results last week, Chairman Carlo Mazzi said Prada was working to 鈥渁dapt to rapidly changing times and to interpret the spirit of new generations without losing sight of our roots.鈥 The brand increased spending on social media to educate new customers about its aesthetic, he said.
Miuccia Prada, the creative director, majority shareholder, and co-chief executive officer, has been using her ugly-chic designs to market insider cool for decades. From stiff, pea-green shift dresses to $700 sandals, Prada built a $3.5 billion business dressing people in clothes designed to make them look interesting or cool rather than rich or beautiful. The items don鈥檛 always look like much to the untrained eye, but for the fashion set, wearing a look from the Prada catwalk sends a powerful signal: you鈥檙e in the know.
鈥淭he clear talent of Prada is to be able to make itself desirable only by the people they covet as clients,鈥 said Elodie Nowinski, professor of fashion studies at EM Lyon Business School.
In recent years, Prada may have been too insider-oriented to grow. As Gucci used social media to push designer Alessandro Michele鈥檚 maximalist revamp of the brand into the fashion spotlight, Prada mostly snubbed the digital sphere. The brand was slow to realize the importance of Instagram, and it sold a limited selection of products online until last year.
Now faith in the turnaround is gathering among investors. The shares have risen nearly 40% over the past 12 months, though they鈥檙e still trading at roughly half the value of their 2013 peak. Analysts at MainFirst wrote Thursday that they expect growth to accelerate later this year, supported by the relaunch of another iconic line, Prada鈥檚 sports-inspired collection Linea Rossa, recognizable for its red tag logo.
The banana motif harks back to a 2011 show that underlined Prada鈥檚 ability to set the fashion agenda. It proposed an improbable mix of strictly tailored pencil skirts, ruffles and tropical prints, with smears of blinding highlighter hues. Within a few months the collection had landed on the covers of more than a dozen top magazines 鈥 sported by the likes of actress Amanda Seyfried, singer Robyn, and Vogue editor Anna Wintour 鈥 and banana earrings, leggings, and blouses invaded retailers from London鈥檚 upmarket Harvey Nichols to the Topshop chain.
It was 鈥渙ne of those rare shows that becomes permanently imprinted into the fashion consciousness,鈥 said Yasmin Sewell, vice-president of style and creative for the luxury e-commerce platform Farfetch. And how will Miuccia Prada follow up on bananas?
鈥淚 can guarantee that next season she鈥檒l be doing something completely different, and have us all scratching our heads again,鈥 Sewell said.
Prada isn鈥檛 the only brand tapping into customer nostalgia by pushing classic looks online: LVMH鈥檚 Christian Dior this summer announced the return of its early-2000s saddle bag line by asking style bloggers from around the world to post snaps of the satchel on Instagram at the same time. In September, Versace showed a 鈥渢ribute鈥 collection with updated versions of founder Gianni鈥檚 most memorable looks, closing the show with a reunion of 1990s models including Naomi Campbell, Claudia Schiffer and former French first lady Carla Bruni.
Prada also isn鈥檛 the only brand doing ugly anymore. From crystal-studded platform Crocs and clunky sneakers at Kering鈥檚 Balenciaga to thigh-high Ugg boots at Y/Project to swaddling prairie dresses pretty much everywhere, the current fashion zeitgeist is little concerned with glossy elegance or flattering the body.
Bringing back the house鈥檚 most challenging prints 鈥渋s a way of asserting Prada鈥檚 domination鈥 in the current climate, said EM Lyon鈥檚 Nowinski.
鈥淭hey did ugly first.鈥 鈥 Bloomberg