• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Science
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
The Rise of ‘Corp Merch’: Why Greggs, KFC and Lidl Are Dropping Streetwear

The Rise of ‘Corp Merch’: Why Greggs, KFC and Lidl Are Dropping Streetwear

May 18, 2022
Andrew Giuliani Chances of Beating Democrats, According to Polls

Andrew Giuliani Chances of Beating Democrats, According to Polls

June 28, 2022
In Russia-Ukraine war, Putin has a new weapon: Food

In Russia-Ukraine war, Putin has a new weapon: Food

June 28, 2022
Antibodies From Llama Blood Can Protect Against COVID, Future and Other Coronaviruses

Antibodies From Llama Blood Can Protect Against COVID, Future and Other Coronaviruses

June 28, 2022
Scotland announces plan for independence vote in October 2023

Scotland announces plan for independence vote in October 2023

June 28, 2022
Macron cabinet minister faces fresh rape allegations from ‘centrist politician’

Macron cabinet minister faces fresh rape allegations from ‘centrist politician’

June 28, 2022
These are some of the deadliest instances of migrant deaths on the southern border.

These are some of the deadliest episodes involving migrants near the southern border.

June 28, 2022
Has India’s Military Recruitment Plan Backfired?

Has India’s Military Recruitment Plan Backfired?

June 28, 2022
Charges spiked against ex-governor, 8 others in Flint water

Charges spiked against ex-governor, 8 others in Flint water

June 28, 2022
TSA Is No Longer Scanning Boarding Passes at These Airports

TSA Is No Longer Scanning Boarding Passes at These Airports

June 28, 2022
Is Abortion Legal In The UK? Pregnancy Termination Rights, Explained

Is Abortion Legal In The UK? Pregnancy Termination Rights, Explained

June 28, 2022
Selena Gomez Is Still Hoping to “Keep Up” With Her Only Murders in the Building Co-Stars

Selena Gomez Is Still Hoping to “Keep Up” With Her Only Murders in the Building Co-Stars

June 28, 2022
At Least 46 Migrants Found Dead in an Overheated Truck

At least 16 people from the overheated tractor-trailer were taken to hospitals, where several died.

June 28, 2022
DNYUZ
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Television
    • Theater
    • Gaming
    • Sports
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
Home Lifestyle Fashion

The Rise of ‘Corp Merch’: Why Greggs, KFC and Lidl Are Dropping Streetwear

May 18, 2022
in Fashion, News
The Rise of ‘Corp Merch’: Why Greggs, KFC and Lidl Are Dropping Streetwear
501
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

I was outside a pub the other weekend when I saw a young man marching past in a full Greggs tracksuit, the big white letters spelling out G-R-E-G-G-S on navy joggers, with a matching hoodie. I wasn’t convinced people like him actually existed before that. I thought the idea of Greggs “merch” was a joke – more about the idea than the reality. But there he was, this young lad, all decked out in the Greggs and Primark collab.  

Greggs aren’t the only big business to have released merch recently. A lot of the UK’s monolithic, everyday mega-brands have been putting out their own clothes. See: Lidl’s chunky trainers and retro swimming shorts, Creme Egg’s conceptual collection from sustainable designer Charlotte Kirkham and, now, KFC and their Y2K-style handbags and bucket hats. Some of this merch has been a hit – famously, the Lidl trainers swiftly sold out and were being resold like they were Supreme. 

But how did this happen? It’s not as if this has always been the case. Woolworths wasn’t releasing shotta bags back in the day. HMV shoes would have been considered weird. Francesca Muston, vice-president of fashion content at trend forecasters WGSN, says that they’ve been monitoring what she calls “the mundane” trend for over three years. “These brand collaborations are deliberately relatable rather than aspirational,” she explains. 

Muston thinks merch like this works because of their casual, everyman vibe – Lidl is cool because Lidl is cheap. “Many of the true heroes of the pandemic were the delivery and public transport drivers, supermarket workers and restaurant staff who enabled life to continue, bringing a newfound appreciation of the brands, services and products which we had taken for granted as a mundane part of life.”

“The current cost of living crisis makes this trend even more relevant,” she says. “It has a realness that celebrates everyday life and rejects the assumption that people are aspiring to something else. It is societal commentary with an honesty that feels refreshing for the fashion industry.”

Amy Hendry, the director of advisory at Fashion Snopes, says that our interest in merch from companies like Lidl, and especially Greggs, can be viewed through the prism of our nonsense-based British sense of humour and kitsch. “People are getting over the ‘perfect’ aesthetic and now they want to be more real and almost this kind of kitsch, jokey real,” she says. 

“Greggs is just the epitome of it,” she adds, noting their sausage roll-emblazoned boxers. There’s something inherently funny about treating a British bakery like a streetwear brand. “It’s like a rebellion against fashion trends, in a way. ‘I’m going to wear what I want and that includes a supermarket t-shirt.’ If enough people do it, it almost becomes a counteraction of itself, where it becomes cool.”

Sure, Greggs might not be Prada and KFC might not be Gucci. But these are still huge corporations (in 2021, KFC’s annual revenue was around £2.2 billion, while Greggs made a profit of :text=In%20its%20full%2Dyear%20results,2019%20ahead%20of%20Covid%20hitting.” target=”_blank”>£145.6 million). And the merch has been released by the brands themselves, not the workers. Doesn’t that kind of destroy the charm, if the corporation is in on – and actively pushing – the joke? I am the proud owner of at least eight different small-town Florida restaurant tees, but at least there’s a little personality to them; each tethered to a memory and a little slice of Guy Fieri Americana.⁠ 

Aside from the kitsch factor, it’s clear the clothes are also earnestly intended to appeal to brand-obsessed Gen Z: the Depop kids and those into the latest streetwear drops. “What Lidl and Greggs worked out is that they are aiming at Gen Z, who are notoriously difficult to market to because they don’t watch TV,” explains Hendry. 

“They don’t really read magazines – they’re all online. Everything is done through social media and TikTok. So they’re really hard to get to. This is creating something that’s kind of like cult wear or meme fashion, where you’d wear it to post it online.”

Thanks to growing up around social media, Gen Z generally more product and brand-based in their fashion, Hendry argues. Millennials may have been aware of what their friends were wearing, but not what the world’s youth were doing. Gen Z, in contrast, are well aware of global trends. “That’s why hype culture and Depop culture is popular with them because it switches and changes regularly, but they can keep up with it because everything is sold to them so easily.”

For Tiffany Hill, a fashion trend forecaster and designer at Tiffany Hill Studio, the likes of KFC are also tapping into and capitalising on a “shift towards nostalgia”. “As Gen Z and millennials continue to wear their favourite brands like badges of honour and 1980s and 1990s nostalgia emerges as a key lifestyle trend, these fun, capsule collections bring these two key elements together,” she says.

Hendry wonders how many young people rocking these looks actually shop in Lidl or Greggs. For the companies though, it’s almost irrelevant. “I think there are two sides to it: There’s one where they’re kind of creating this fashion for meme culture and social media,” she says. “But also, it’s a great way for free advertising because logos and brand mania are really popular with the younger generation. They’re wanting to make themselves a meme or something viral, that means that their name is being spread. It’s incredibly great marketing.”

Looking ahead, Hill said distinctly non-fashion brands like Lidl entering the merch space “opens up new opportunities for other established retailers and chains to follow suit, as long as they retain their authenticity and unique identity”.

It’s halfway impressive how these everyday corporations have been able to capture the zeitgeist. Lidl’s merch drops show a certain generational savvy many execs could only dream of. “It’s not like queuing up for the latest Off-White sneakers,” Hendry says. “It’s queuing up for something that is totally affordable and can be worn by everybody, so it’s really clever. It still kind of blows my mind.”

The post The Rise of ‘Corp Merch’: Why Greggs, KFC and Lidl Are Dropping Streetwear appeared first on VICE.

Share200Tweet125Share

Trending Posts

Bolu Babalola’s Honey & Spice Is a Deliciously Modern Love Story

Bolu Babalola’s Honey & Spice Is a Deliciously Modern Love Story

June 28, 2022
Indictments in Flint Water Crisis Are Invalid, Michigan Supreme Court Finds

Indictments in Flint Water Crisis Are Invalid, Michigan Supreme Court Finds

June 28, 2022
Opaque Systems helps enterprises run collaborative analytics on confidential data

Opaque Systems helps enterprises run collaborative analytics on confidential data

June 28, 2022
VW sells minority stake in Electrify America to Siemens

VW sells minority stake in Electrify America to Siemens

June 28, 2022
F.D.A. Advisers Consider the Next Generation of Covid Vaccines

F.D.A. advisers discuss whether Covid vaccines should be updated for fall.

June 28, 2022

Copyright © 2022.

Site Navigation

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Sports
    • Television
    • Theater
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

Copyright © 2022.