Designers cash in on celebrity babies
Updated: 2014-12-01 05:15
By Matt Hodges and Yu Ran(Shanghai Star)
|
|||||||||||
Model child: A young girl has her hair done ahead of a fashion show. There is a growing demand for high-end children's fashion. Photo provided to Shanghai Star |
Luxury brands are looking to cash in on China's "little emperors and empresses", Matt Hodges and Yu Ran discover.
Christmas has come early to the Ralph Lauren kids' clothing store at Plaza 66 on Nanjing West Road. By mid-November, it is already decked out in white, red and green as it prepares to cash in on two emerging trends: gift-giving at Yuletide and increased spending on kids' luxury fashionwear.
Inside, Chen Fang, a housewife from Hubei province in her early 30s, is sifting through embroidered velvet and flutter-sleeve dresses for her four-year-old while her husband guards some shopping bags from Chanel.
"We fly to Shanghai to shop because we can't get these brands where we live," says Chen.
"I don't have a specific budget for my daughter, but I spend as much on her as I do on myself," she adds "I buy new clothes and shoes each season, mostly from luxury branded stores, to keep her looking different from the other kids."
Baby Dior set down tent poles in Shanghai in 2010 – four years after Zara opened its first kids' clothing store in the city — and a slew of top-end foreign brands have followed suit in the last year alone. At Dior's outlet in Plaza 66, two shrunken but fancy-looking chairs in the changing room add to its Alice-in-Wonderland, doll-house vibe.
Related Stories
Carven expands in China, opens stores 2014-11-25 07:56
Barbara Hulanicki to return to Biba label 2014-11-22 14:19
Preowned luxury ranks equally valuable 2014-11-21 07:50
Topshop a hit with online fashionistas 2014-11-18 08:42
The sporting life of Wang and H&M 2014-11-18 07:34
Today's Top News
One-child allowances continue with second birth
Editorial: Get HKSAR back on track
Women still outnumbered in top jobs
China, US targeting terror online
Gates has cameo in anti-smoking video
UK brothers jailed for attending terror camp
Visa change may boost tourism to the US
British couple arrested on suspicion of Syria-related 'terror offences'
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Blue skies ready to greet APEC |
Growth pangs |
Sea change |
'Old newcomers' |
General aviation hub reaches for the sky |
Endangered species threatens livelihoods |