We’ve all been there. You find an item of clothing you like, go to the change room and need to take two or three sizes with you because you have no idea what your actual size is anymore.
Cue a frustrated shopping experience trying on a series of clothes that don’t fit.
This is called vanity sizing. A practice by retailers to size their clothing down so you fit into a smaller size than you normally would. So if you are usually a size 16, you’d instead fit into a size 14 or size 12. It’s to trick you into thinking that you’ve lost weight and will in turn, buy the clothes.
But retailers? The jig is up. You’re not fooling anyone. We know we haven’t lost any weight.
Vanity sizing aside, clothing manufacturers have now developed a new way of messing with our self-esteem. The Wall Street Journal has reported on the rise of so-called “alpha sizing,” where retailers combine several sizes into small, medium, and large as opposed to using numbers.
Apparently, clothing labelled small is much more likely to sell out than clothing labelled with a size 6, or even a size 8. It’s also commercially more viable.
“If I only have to build four sizes instead of eight, my supply chain is going to be much more [cost] efficient,” says Ed Gribbin, president of a New York firm that consults on sizing and fit strategy.
Top Comments
This issue is so frustrating!
Wouldn't it be sensible to label in standard units, like men's clothing "32 inches" etc? Every single 32 inch item is.......32 inches!
How hard can it be??
Does Sizeable not make clothing over a size 14? Or did they just not bother with another model or two?