This week I had the unfortunate experience of clicking on this article: Dry-Clean Your Clothes The Feminist Way, which really got my goat. Not because I have anything against New York City dry cleaners but because as vagina-possessors we are perpetually getting screwed over when it comes to consumption of retail goods.
As far as us women have come in the last 75, 50, 20 years there is still plenty of gender-based price discrimination that exist today and we’re LETTING it happen, you guys.
You’ve heard that Aussie women make 83 cents for every dollar that men make many times before, but if we make less money then why are we getting taken to the cleaners on everything from dry cleaning to hair removal?
Many women begrudgingly accept that their haircut will cost up to five times more than a men’s cut. Even if you go to a cheaper salon, have short hair and are just getting a trim, you will still pay more than a man.
(You will also be there for five times as long, but that’s another rant entirely.)
A fancy pants men’s razor will set a guy back around $11 whereas the equivalent women’s razor from the same company will have added moisturizing strips and suction cups that never stick and cost around $14.
And don’t even get me started on waxing, how is it that men have coarser hair and more surface area yet are paying less? The same goes for nails; a men’s manicure at my local salon costs $50 (inc polish) while manicures for women are sold as ‘Deluxe’ or ‘Indulgent’ and cost $10 and $20 more respectively.
These lady houses should be our safe place, yet instead we’re giving men a discount? What the…what, what?
One woman is going on a feminist crusade after being charged more for dry cleaning an almost identical blue Brooks Brothers oxford shirt to the one her husband owns. She took them to be laundered at Best Cleaners in Chelsea (NY) and the shirts came back clean, but Ms. Floyd discovered that hers cost $8.75, her husband’s $7.
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I'm just stunned that people get plain business shirts dry cleaned. For silk, sure, but washable fabrics, total waste of money and hardly a time saver.
I need to find the original laundry article but I'm not surprised by women's shirts costing more to iron in NYC where time & money & productivity are a premium.
And it has nothing to do with women being 'taken advantage of'!
If this women in the original article was familiar with ironing frequently she would realise guy's shirts are so simple up & down. But women's shirts are tailored to have curves and pleats which makes them fiddly (and tend to be more wide ranging in design & materials). Therefore I think that justifies the extra $1.25 to carefully check the label direction and mucking around for pleats and curves. You might no see or think of that difference at home but when there are hundreds of shirts to iron in a day, things that take longer will cost more, so it makes sense.
see picture, in fact woman's is smaller but exactly the same shirt.
Actually there are curves in the woman's shirt where her husband's has straight seams and things like that do slow down a professional when ironing/pressing etc.