This page will contain videos about Abercrombie and Fitch, as they become available.Abercrombie & FitchAbercrombie & Fitch logo. Abercrombie & Fitch model in a 2006 advertising campaign.Abercrombie & Fitch is a specialty retailer encompassing four concepts: Abercrombie & Fitch, abercrombie (Abercrombie Kids), Hollister Co., and Ruehl no.925. The merchandise is sold in retail stores throughout the United States, in catalogs, and online. As of 2006, the company operated 351 Abercrombie & Fitch stores in all U.S. states (except Wyoming) and in the District of Columbia, and 3 stores in Canada. HistoryDuring the beginning of the 20th century, Abercrombie & Fitch Co. was one of the most popular retail stores for America's sporting elite. The company's clientele consisted of mainly big-game hunters, fishermen, and outdoorsmen. Abercrombie & Fitch not only outfitted wealthy people, it also outfitted some of America's most influential leaders and celebrities on their excursions. Every president from Theodore Roosevelt to Gerald Ford is said to have been outfitted by the company in some capacity (Teddy Roosevelt was an especially enthusiastic outdoorsman and Abercrombie & Fitch customer, and he frequently visited the store in preparation for his famous African safaris). Other famous people to pass through Abercrombie & Fitch's doors include Charles Lindbergh, Amelia Earhart, Greta Garbo, Katharine Hepburn, Clark Gable, and author Ernest Hemingway, who killed himself using a shotgun purchased at an Abercrombie & Fitch store. Abercrombie & Fitch began as a small waterfront shop and factory in lower Manhattan in June 4, 1892. David Abercrombie, born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland, was a former trapper, prospector, topographer and railroad surveyor. He was also an inventor, an ingenious designer of tents, rucksacks and other camping equipment. It was his love of the great outdoors that inspired him to begin Abercrombie & Co., a shop dedicated to selling only the highest-quality camping, fishing and hunting gear. His clientele consisted mostly of professional hunters, explorers and trappers. In 1900, Ezra Fitch, a wealthy New York lawyer and loyal customer, expressed a desire to buy into the growing company. Abercrombie accepted his offer, and Fitch joined as a partner. Soon thereafter, the shop moved to a larger location at 314 Broadway St. In 1904, the store became incorporated and the official name of the company was changed to Abercrombie & Fitch Co. The partnership, however, was ill-fated. David Abercrombie and Ezra Fitch were stubborn, hot-tempered men, and both had vastly differing opinions on how best to run the establishment. Abercrombie was more conservative, content to continue the store as it was, selling professional gear to professional outdoorsmen. Fitch, on the other hand, was more of a visionary. He was positive that the future of the business lay in expansion, selling the outdoors and its delights to more of the general public. The two quarrelled frequently, often violently, even as the company grew increasingly successful. In 1907, Abercrombie sold his share in the company to Fitch and returned to manufacturing outdoor goods. Fitch continued the business with other partners and was, for the first time, able to direct the company in a manner to his pleasing. Fitch determined that the store ought to have an outdoor feeling. Stock was not hidden behind glass cabinets. Instead, it was displayed as if in use. He set up a tent and equipped it as if it were out in the middle of the wilds of the Adirondacks. A campfire blazed in one corner, where an experienced guide was always in attendance, imparting valuable information to interested customers. Part of Fitch's strategy to expand the company was the creation of a mail-order catalog. In 1909, Abercrombie & Fitch mailed out over its 456 page catalog, which included outdoor clothing, camping gear, articles, and advice columns, to 50,000 customers worldwide. By 1913, the store moved to a more fashionable and easily accessible midtown address just off Fifth Avenue, expanding its inventory to include sport clothing. A&F became the first store in New York to supply such clothing to women as well as men. In 1917, Abercrombie & Fitch Co. moved yet again to a twelve-story building on Madison Avenue. The store occupied the entire available space, making it the world's largest sporting goods store. Outside, a sign proclaimed, "Where the Blazed Trail Crosses the Boulevard." The flagship store included many different amenities. In the basement there was a shooting range, on the mezzanine there was paraphernalia for skiing, archery, skin-diving, and lawn games. The second through the fifth floors were reserved for clothing that was suitable for any climate or terrain. On the sixth floor, there was a picture gallery and a bookstore that focused on sporting themes, a watch repair facility and a golf school, fully equipped with a resident professional. The seventh floor included a gun room, stuffed game heads, and about seven hundred shot guns and rifles. The eighth floor was dedicated solely to fishing, camping, and boating. It also included a desk that belonged to a fly- and bait-casting instructor who gave lessons at the pool, which was located on the roof. The fishing section of the store alone was stocked with over 48,000 flies and over 18,000 fishing lures. The clerks hired at Abercrombie & Fitch were not professional salesmen, but rugged outdoorsmen. Talking was their pleasure and selling was performed only at the customers' insistence. In 1928, Ezra Fitch retired from the company. Despite the change in ownership, Abercrombie & Fitch continued to expand. In 1939, it adopted the slogan, "The Greatest Sporting Goods Store in the World." By 1958, the company operated stores in Chicago and San Francisco, wintertime-only stores in Palm Beach and Sarasota, Florida; and summertime-only stores in Bayhead, New Jersey; and Southampton, New York. The expansion continued through the 1960s, when the company opened new stores in Colorado Springs, Colorado; Short Hills, New Jersey; Bal Harbour, Florida; and Detroit, Michigan. Despite the chain's apparent success, the company began to falter financially in the 1960s and went bankrupt in 1977. Oshman's, a sporting goods retailer, acquired Abercrombie soon thereafter, but the company continued to struggle. Abercrombie & Fitch todayIn 1988, The Limited Inc. (now called Limited Brands) acquired Abercrombie & Fitch, determined to reinvigorate the ailing brand. The Limited had been successful in rolling out new concept stores, such as Express, which sold women's clothing, and Victoria's Secret, which sold lingerie and beauty products. Over the next decade, Abercrombie & Fitch was carefully rebuilt as a teen apparel merchandiser. The company began opening stores in upscale malls across America in the early 1990s, targeting teenagers and college students aged 18-24 from higher-income families. Abercrombie & Fitch is a self-proclaimed "casual luxury" retailer. Much like Ralph Lauren (whose style is frequently evoked in Abercrombie & Fitch’s apparel), the clothing is fairly predictable: woven shirts, denim, miniskirts, cargo shorts, wool sweaters, polo shirts, and t-shirts can be found in most collections. Labels on clothing reinforce the company’s image as a casual luxury merchandiser and emphasize the quality and durability of the product. The clothing produced in the 1990s was fairly consistent with the brand's preppy image and tended to be less trend-driven than today's offerings, which bear significantly less resemblence to traditional Northeastern prep school apparel. The store quickly became successful, and by the mid-1990s, there were dozens of Abercrombie & Fitch stores in the United States. Careful marketing made the brand synonymous with wealth and status among young patrons. In 1996, The Limited took Abercrombie & Fitch public on the New York Stock Exchange and gradually phased out its ownership of the company. The original store concept (referred to as the "chain store" concept) hearkened back to the outdoorsy image of company's early years. The store resembled a hunting lodge, with plaid carpeting, dark wood fixtures, and antler chandeliers. However, the company introduced a new store concept (referred to as the "canoe store" concept) in the late 1990s to accommodate its rapid growth. The canoe store is recognized by a white facade, navy blue awnings, and solid metal and glass doors. The interior features gray walls, white molding, polished concrete and black wood floors, metal fixtures, and large pictures of scantily-clad models. A moose head is mounted above the cashwrap and a canoe is mounted in the main room of each canoe store. Unlike the chain store, which typically has a wider storefront and two entrances, the canoe store has one main entrance and is walled off into at least five rooms. The company is in the process of converting all of its chain store concepts into canoe stores. Abercrombie & Fitch has complete control over the design and production of its merchandise, stores, and marketing. Because it spends little on external advertising, the company depends upon the store experience to help define the brand. The company strictly regulates the store environment in an effort to provide a consistent, pleasureful experience for customers in a manner that can be replicated in each store. Factors such as visual presentation, music, and fragrance are not left to chance. The company also specifies in painstaking detail how lighting, layout, visual displays, marketing, and fixtures are to be placed and used in every store. Each store is spritzed daily with men’s cologne in order to ensure a pleasant sensory experience. Every store plays the same pre-produced music segment for a period of four to five weeks and has instructions on how loud the music is to be played at certain times of the day or week. Abercrombie & Fitch has become notorious for loud, pulsing dance music, often eliciting complaints from mall operators and tenants for disrupting other customers and stores. Merchandising is managed in a similar fashion. Every week, each store is sent a booklet—often over 100 pages long—detailing the exact specifications for placing merchandise on the sale floor. Older merchandise is shuffled around to provide a different presentation for frequent customers each time they enter the store, while new items are generally placed out in the front rooms for display. Apparel is laid out so that customers can feel the fabrics, contributing to the sensory experience offered in-store. The company manages merchandising, distribution, and sales by assigning each store a tier level (1, 2, 3, 4, or 5) and a volume level (A, B, C, D, E, or F). Tier level determines what selection of the current clothing line is sent to a store. Tier 1 stores receive all of the current items in all styles and colors, for example, while lower tier stores are sent less merchandise in a smaller range of sizes and colors. A store's tier level is independent of its volume, since allocation is often dependent on available area of selling space. Some small stores are relatively high volume, but lack the floor space needed to support the entire line. A store can have different tier designations for its men's and women's sides. (Women's retail normally outperforms men's by a ratio of about 2:1, though in certain markets the difference is greater or less.) The company designates Volume A stores, usually in major cities and tourist destinations, as "elite" or "super-elite." There are three super elite (AA) stores (Ala Moana in Hawaii, Aventura in Florida, and South Street Seaport in New York City) and less than thirty elite (A) stores in the chain. The company has opted to build only large stores, averaging 8,000 to 20,000 square feet (700 to 2,000 m²) in high-volume retail centers around the country. Throughout the 1990s, Abercrombie & Fitch enjoyed sales of over $400/ft² ($4300/m²) —high by retail standards—but that number has dropped significantly in recent years. As of 2003, sales were $345/ft² ($3700/m²). The rapid expansion of the chain from 1999-2003, in addition to the introduction of the company’s more moderately-priced concept Hollister Co., arguably contributed to a decrease in same-store sales (an important measure of retail performance) across the chain during that time period. In order to fend off what analysts often called the "cannibalizing" effect that Hollister is having on the flagship chain, Abercrombie & Fitch has attempted to differentiate itself from its sister brand by raising price-points, introducing a line of higher-end merchandise called "Ezra Fitch," and establishing strategies to limit the intrusion of Hollister into key Abercrombie & Fitch markets. Such efforts appear to be working: Abercrombie & Fitch logged an impressive 29% increase in same-store sales in December 2005, while most other specialty retailers experienced only moderate advances. In November of 2005, the company completed construction of its flagship Fifth Avenue location in New York City. The four-level store is the largest in the chain and is located on 56th street and 5th Avenue, alongside boutiques by luxury retailers such as Fendi, Prada, and Chanel. The company is currently expanding its Los Angeles flagship store at The Grove at Farmers Market. The company marked its expansion into Canada in January of 2006, opening two Abercrombie & Fitch stores and three Hollister Co. stores in that country. The company will add additional stores in Canada during the next several years and plans to open stores in Europe and Asia by 2007. Lifestyle brandA racy photograph from Abercrombie & Fitch's discontinued Quarterly magazine. The publication became a lightning rod for controversy when it began to publish sexual photographs of young models and offer products for children.Abercrombie & Fitch aggressively positions itself as a "lifestyle brand"—a brand that embodies the values and appeal of a desirable way of living. The stores are plastered with photos of physically attractive young models, blast loud dance music through powerful speakers, and smell of the company's signature cologne. The stores are also staffed with attractive "brand representatives", young salespeople who embody the Abercrombie & Fitch lifestyle: attractive, athletic, popular, enthusiastic, and outgoing. For years, brand representatives were required to wear only Abercrombie & Fitch clothing, but such regulations have been loosened following lawsuits. The most conspicuous of the company's lifestyle branding efforts was its now-defunct magazine, A&F Quarterly, which the company published from 1997 to 2003. The publication was a hybrid magazine and catalog (company officials referred to it as a "magalog".) and featured advice columns, articles about college life, and—most famously—the highly sexual fine art work of photographer Bruce Weber. The racy publication made a splash with young customers and had one of the highest circulation rates among young adults of any magazine in the late 1990s. Print advertisements for the A&F Quarterly appeared in Interview and Out magazines in addition to Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair. In 1999, the company rolled out "A&F TV", a feature that spotlights young people engaged in sports and leisure activities. A&F TV was originally developed to run on cable television and on monitors in Abercrombie & Fitch stores, but currently is offered only on the company's website. The company's playful, homoerotic marketing made Abercrombie & Fitch a destination for the gay market in the late 1990s, though the company denies that it ever made a concerted effort to market to gay customers. Controversy and criticismA&F QuarterlyThe A&F Quarterly became a lightning rod for controversy shortly after it was published. It featured photographs of attractive young male and female models, often partially or scantily dressed, posing in pairs or groups, which many likened to softcore pornography. Despite a company policy restricted sale of the publication to adults, critics charged that the publication was readily sold to minors. Several states threatened to pursue legal action, though the company was never charged with violating any related statutes. The publication was also criticized on moral grounds, for featuring sexually explicit interviews with porn stars, and articles that, according to critics, glamorized alcohol consumption, group sex, homosexuality, and self-performed oral sex. In 2003, an array of religious organizations, women's rights activists, and Asian-American groups organized boycotts and protests over the publication, and the "Christmas Edition" of the catalog was removed from stores. In 2004, "A&F Magazine", a comparatively tame collection of photos and essays about rising celebrities, replaced the publication altogether. ProductsThe company's clothing has also been the subject of criticism. In 2002, controversy erupted over shirts featuring caricatures of Asians and other ethnic groups. One shirt featured the slogan "Wong Brothers Laundry Service—Two Wongs Can Make It White" with smiling figures in conical hats, a 1900s popular-culture depiction of Chinese immigrants. The company discontinued the designs and apologized after a boycott by Asian-American student groups. That same year, the children's clothing division removed a line of thong underwear sold for girls in pre-teen children's sizes after parents mounted nationwide storefront protests. The underwear included phrases like "Eye Candy" and "Wink Wink" printed on the front. Abercrombie & Fitch T-shirts caused controversy in 2005.More T-shirt controversy occurred twice in 2004. The first incident involved a shirt featuring the phrase, "It's All Relative in West Virginia," an apparent jab at incest relations in the rural South. West Virginia governor Bob Wise spoke out against the company for depicting "an unfounded, negative stereotype of West Virginia," but the shirts were not removed. The second incident involved another t-shirt with the phrase "L is for Loser" written next to a picture of a male gymnast on the rings. The company stopped selling the shirt in October of 2004 after USA Gymnastics president Bob Colarossi announced a boycott of Abercrombie & Fitch for mocking the sport. In November 2005, the Women & Girls Foundation of Southwest Pennsylvania launched a "girl-cott" of the store for selling T-shirts bearing phrases like "Who needs a brain when you have these?" The campaign went national on NBC's Today Show, and the company pulled the shirts from stores on November 5, 2005. Employment PracticesFor several years, Abercrombie & Fitch has faced accusations of discrimination against minority employees. A 2004 lawsuit — Gonzales v. Abercrombie & Fitch — accused the company of discriminating against minority employees by offering desirable positions to white employees. The company agreed to an out of court settlement of the class action suit. As part of the settlement terms, A&F agreed to pay $40 million to rejected applicants and affected employees, institute policies and programs that promote diversity in its workforce and advertising campaigns, appoint a Vice President of Diversity, hire 25 recruiters to seek minority employees, and discontinue the practice of recruiting employees at primarily white fraternities and sororities. Other brands and additional informationAbercrombie & Fitch operates three additional concept stores: abercrombie (Abercrombie Kids), a smaller version of the original chain which aims to attract patrons ages 7-14; Hollister Co., which sells California-inspired apparel to attract patrons 14-18; and RUEHL, which sells business casual and leather goods to target ages 22-30. The company has expressed interest in developing a fifth concept, though there are no confirmed plans to introduce another brand to the market in the near future. As the Abercrombie & Fitch brand reaches its full growth potential in the U.S., the company is depending on the Hollister Co. and RUEHL concepts to act as its primary growth vehicles in the U.S. The company will also begin expanding the brands internationally, expanding to Europe by 2006 and Japan by 2007. In 2003, the company expanded its New Albany, Ohio headquarters (a suburb of Columbus)[1]. Set amid acres of forest, the compound features rustic, farm-styled structures with elements of modern architecture, a reflection of the company's outdoorsy roots. The campus includes a mess hall, fire pits, trails, a recreational center, and an Abercrombie & Fitch store, where marketing and design elements are developed. The interior design bears a likeness to the stores, furnished with dark wood and concrete floors, leather couches, and comfortably-worn rugs. Abercrombie & Fitch models in a 2002 advertisement.Management
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The interior design bears a likeness to the stores, furnished with dark wood and concrete floors, leather couches, and comfortably-worn rugs. She considers each architectural feature, chapter by chapter, to reveal how various art deco styles influenced British domestic architecture in 1920s and 1930s. The campus includes a mess hall, fire pits, trails, a recreational center, and an Abercrombie & Fitch store, where marketing and design elements are developed. Jean Gardner's book Houses of the Art Deco Years ISBN 1898030715 looks at the influence of art deco upon suburban housing styles in England. Set amid acres of forest, the compound features rustic, farm-styled structures with elements of modern architecture, a reflection of the company's outdoorsy roots. This is still the image of Art Deco held in the minds of most Americans. In 2003, the company expanded its New Albany, Ohio headquarters (a suburb of Columbus)[1]. A resurgence of interest in Art Deco came with graphic design in the 1980s, where its association with film noir and 1930s glamour led to its use in ads for jewelry and fashion. The company will also begin expanding the brands internationally, expanding to Europe by 2006 and Japan by 2007. In colonial countries such as India, it became a gateway for Modernism and continued to be used well into the 1960s. and RUEHL concepts to act as its primary growth vehicles in the U.S. Eventually the style was cut short by the austerities of World War II. As the Abercrombie & Fitch brand reaches its full growth potential in the U.S., the company is depending on the Hollister Co. Art Deco slowly lost patronage in the West after reaching mass production, where it began to be derided as gaudy and presenting a false image of luxury. The company has expressed interest in developing a fifth concept, though there are no confirmed plans to introduce another brand to the market in the near future. Some historians see Art Deco as a type of or early form of Modernism. Abercrombie & Fitch operates three additional concept stores: abercrombie (Abercrombie Kids), a smaller version of the original chain which aims to attract patrons ages 7-14; Hollister Co., which sells California-inspired apparel to attract patrons 14-18; and RUEHL, which sells business casual and leather goods to target ages 22-30. In architecture, this style was characterised by rounded corners, used predominantly for buildings at road junctions. As part of the settlement terms, A&F agreed to pay $40 million to rejected applicants and affected employees, institute policies and programs that promote diversity in its workforce and advertising campaigns, appoint a Vice President of Diversity, hire 25 recruiters to seek minority employees, and discontinue the practice of recruiting employees at primarily white fraternities and sororities. Once the Chrysler Air-Flo design of 1933 was successful, "streamlined" forms began to be used even for objects such as pencil sharpeners and refrigerators. The company agreed to an out of court settlement of the class action suit. A parallel movement following close behind, the Streamline or Streamline Moderne, was influenced by manufacturing and streamlining techniques arising from science and mass production- shape of bullet, liners, etc., where aerodynamics are involved. Abercrombie & Fitch — accused the company of discriminating against minority employees by offering desirable positions to white employees. Art Deco was a popular style for interiors of cinema theatres and ocean liners such as the Ile de France and Normandie. A 2004 lawsuit — Gonzales v. Art Deco was an opulent style and this opulence is attributed as a reaction to the forced austerity during the years of World War I. For several years, Abercrombie & Fitch has faced accusations of discrimination against minority employees. Some of these motifs were ubiquitous- for example the sunburst motif was used in such varied contexts as a lady's shoe, a radiator grille, the auditorium of the Radio City Music Hall and the spire of the Chrysler Building. In November 2005, the Women & Girls Foundation of Southwest Pennsylvania launched a "girl-cott" of the store for selling T-shirts bearing phrases like "Who needs a brain when you have these?" The campaign went national on NBC's Today Show, and the company pulled the shirts from stores on November 5, 2005. The bold use of zigzag and stepped forms, and sweeping curves (unlike the sinuous curves of the Art nouveau), chevron patterns, and the sunburst motif. The company stopped selling the shirt in October of 2004 after USA Gymnastics president Bob Colarossi announced a boycott of Abercrombie & Fitch for mocking the sport. Corresponding to these influences, the Art Deco is characterised by use of materials such as aluminium, stainless steel, lacquer, inlaid wood, sharkskin, and zebraskin. The second incident involved another t-shirt with the phrase "L is for Loser" written next to a picture of a male gymnast on the rings. It is considered to be eclectic, being influenced by a variety of sources, to name a few:. West Virginia governor Bob Wise spoke out against the company for depicting "an unfounded, negative stereotype of West Virginia," but the shirts were not removed. Its practitioners were not working as a coherent community. The first incident involved a shirt featuring the phrase, "It's All Relative in West Virginia," an apparent jab at incest relations in the rural South. The term Art Deco was coined during the Exposition of 1925 but did not receive wider usage until it was re-evaluated in the 1960s. More T-shirt controversy occurred twice in 2004. Paris remained the center of the high end of Art Deco design, epitomized in furniture by Jacques-Emile Ruhlmann, the best-known of Art Deco furniture designers and perhaps the last of the traditional Parisian ébénistes, and Jean-Jacques Rateau, the firm of Süe et Mare, the screens of Eileen Gray, wrought iron of Edgar Brandt, metalwork and lacquer of Swiss-Jewish Jean Dunand, the glass of René Lalique and Maurice Marinot, clocks and jewelry by Cartier. The underwear included phrases like "Eye Candy" and "Wink Wink" printed on the front. until about 1928, when it quickly modulated into the Streamline Moderne during the 1930s, the decade with which Americanized Art Deco is most strongly associated today. That same year, the children's clothing division removed a line of thong underwear sold for girls in pre-teen children's sizes after parents mounted nationwide storefront protests. Art Deco did not originate with the Exposition; it was a major style in Europe from the early 1920s, though it did not catch on in the U.S. The company discontinued the designs and apologized after a boycott by Asian-American student groups. Art Deco derived its name from the World's fair held in Paris in 1925, formally titled the Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes, which showcased French luxury goods and reassured the world that Paris remained the international center of style after World War I. One shirt featured the slogan "Wong Brothers Laundry Service—Two Wongs Can Make It White" with smiling figures in conical hats, a 1900s popular-culture depiction of Chinese immigrants. . In 2002, controversy erupted over shirts featuring caricatures of Asians and other ethnic groups. Art Deco (French: Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes) was an early twentieth century movement in the decorative arts, that also grew in influence to affect architecture, fashion and the visual arts. The company's clothing has also been the subject of criticism. Far Eastern University Campus in the City of Manila, Philippines. In 2004, "A&F Magazine", a comparatively tame collection of photos and essays about rising celebrities, replaced the publication altogether. Former Pennsylvania Railroad 30th Street Station and Suburban Station in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In 2003, an array of religious organizations, women's rights activists, and Asian-American groups organized boycotts and protests over the publication, and the "Christmas Edition" of the catalog was removed from stores. South Beach in Miami Beach, Florida. The publication was also criticized on moral grounds, for featuring sexually explicit interviews with porn stars, and articles that, according to critics, glamorized alcohol consumption, group sex, homosexuality, and self-performed oral sex. 720 and 730 Fort Washington Avenue, in the Hudson Heights area of Manhattan in New York City, New York. Several states threatened to pursue legal action, though the company was never charged with violating any related statutes. Carbon and Carbide Building. Despite a company policy restricted sale of the publication to adults, critics charged that the publication was readily sold to minors. Chicago Board of Trade Building. It featured photographs of attractive young male and female models, often partially or scantily dressed, posing in pairs or groups, which many likened to softcore pornography. Chicago, Illinois
The A&F Quarterly became a lightning rod for controversy shortly after it was published. Waterman Phileas fountain pen. The company's playful, homoerotic marketing made Abercrombie & Fitch a destination for the gay market in the late 1990s, though the company denies that it ever made a concerted effort to market to gay customers. The Cincinnati Museum Center at Union Terminal in Cincinnati, Ohio. A&F TV was originally developed to run on cable television and on monitors in Abercrombie & Fitch stores, but currently is offered only on the company's website. The city hall of Asheville, North Carolina, built 1926 - 28 [1]. In 1999, the company rolled out "A&F TV", a feature that spotlights young people engaged in sports and leisure activities. Designed by Bruce Goff. Print advertisements for the A&F Quarterly appeared in Interview and Out magazines in addition to Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair. Boston Avenue Methodist Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The racy publication made a splash with young customers and had one of the highest circulation rates among young adults of any magazine in the late 1990s. The Colleen Moore Dollhouse at the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry. The publication was a hybrid magazine and catalog (company officials referred to it as a "magalog".) and featured advice columns, articles about college life, and—most famously—the highly sexual fine art work of photographer Bruce Weber. Eltham Palace extension, south-east London. The most conspicuous of the company's lifestyle branding efforts was its now-defunct magazine, A&F Quarterly, which the company published from 1997 to 2003. The East and West Stands at Arsenal Stadium in London. For years, brand representatives were required to wear only Abercrombie & Fitch clothing, but such regulations have been loosened following lawsuits. Marine Building in Vancouver. The stores are also staffed with attractive "brand representatives", young salespeople who embody the Abercrombie & Fitch lifestyle: attractive, athletic, popular, enthusiastic, and outgoing. Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa. The stores are plastered with photos of physically attractive young models, blast loud dance music through powerful speakers, and smell of the company's signature cologne. Université de Montréal central building. Abercrombie & Fitch aggressively positions itself as a "lifestyle brand"—a brand that embodies the values and appeal of a desirable way of living. Radio City Music Hall. The company will add additional stores in Canada during the next several years and plans to open stores in Europe and Asia by 2007. Anzac War Memorial, Sydney built 1929-34 designed C Bruce Dellit (1900-1942), Sculptor: Rayner Hoff. stores in that country. The India of Inchinnan office block, Inchinnan, Renfrewshire, Scotland. The company marked its expansion into Canada in January of 2006, opening two Abercrombie & Fitch stores and three Hollister Co. The former Byrant and May match factory in Speke, Liverpool. The company is currently expanding its Los Angeles flagship store at The Grove at Farmers Market. The Hoover Building, Perivale, London. The four-level store is the largest in the chain and is located on 56th street and 5th Avenue, alongside boutiques by luxury retailers such as Fendi, Prada, and Chanel. The city was rebuilt in the Art Deco style. In November of 2005, the company completed construction of its flagship Fifth Avenue location in New York City. Napier, New Zealand - In 1931 the city of Napier was levelled by the Napier earthquake and ensuing fires. Such efforts appear to be working: Abercrombie & Fitch logged an impressive 29% increase in same-store sales in December 2005, while most other specialty retailers experienced only moderate advances. The Montreal Eaton 9th floor restaurant is a copy of the huge SS Ile de France first class dining room. In order to fend off what analysts often called the "cannibalizing" effect that Hollister is having on the flagship chain, Abercrombie & Fitch has attempted to differentiate itself from its sister brand by raising price-points, introducing a line of higher-end merchandise called "Ezra Fitch," and establishing strategies to limit the intrusion of Hollister into key Abercrombie & Fitch markets. The ocean liners Ile de France, Normandie and RMS Queen Mary. The rapid expansion of the chain from 1999-2003, in addition to the introduction of the company’s more moderately-priced concept Hollister Co., arguably contributed to a decrease in same-store sales (an important measure of retail performance) across the chain during that time period. Asmara, the capital city of Eritrea. As of 2003, sales were $345/ft² ($3700/m²). Buffalo City Hall in Buffalo, New York. Throughout the 1990s, Abercrombie & Fitch enjoyed sales of over $400/ft² ($4300/m²) —high by retail standards—but that number has dropped significantly in recent years. Peace Hotel in Shanghai. The company has opted to build only large stores, averaging 8,000 to 20,000 square feet (700 to 2,000 m²) in high-volume retail centers around the country. The Mapes Hotel in Reno, Nevada. (Women's retail normally outperforms men's by a ratio of about 2:1, though in certain markets the difference is greater or less.) The company designates Volume A stores, usually in major cities and tourist destinations, as "elite" or "super-elite." There are three super elite (AA) stores (Ala Moana in Hawaii, Aventura in Florida, and South Street Seaport in New York City) and less than thirty elite (A) stores in the chain. Guardian Building in Detroit. A store can have different tier designations for its men's and women's sides. Fisher Building in Detroit. Some small stores are relatively high volume, but lack the floor space needed to support the entire line. Golden Gate Bridge. A store's tier level is independent of its volume, since allocation is often dependent on available area of selling space. Dallas Fair Park Hall of State. Tier 1 stores receive all of the current items in all styles and colors, for example, while lower tier stores are sent less merchandise in a smaller range of sizes and colors. Chrysler Building. Tier level determines what selection of the current clothing line is sent to a store. Empire State Building. The company manages merchandising, distribution, and sales by assigning each store a tier level (1, 2, 3, 4, or 5) and a volume level (A, B, C, D, E, or F). The Bullock's Wilshire Building in Los Angeles, California (now home to Southwestern University School of Law). Apparel is laid out so that customers can feel the fabrics, contributing to the sensory experience offered in-store. The Argyle Hotel in Los Angeles, California. Older merchandise is shuffled around to provide a different presentation for frequent customers each time they enter the store, while new items are generally placed out in the front rooms for display. Owen Williams. Every week, each store is sent a booklet—often over 100 pages long—detailing the exact specifications for placing merchandise on the sale floor. Williams. Merchandising is managed in a similar fashion. Ernest A. Abercrombie & Fitch has become notorious for loud, pulsing dance music, often eliciting complaints from mall operators and tenants for disrupting other customers and stores. Thomas Wallis. Every store plays the same pre-produced music segment for a period of four to five weeks and has instructions on how loud the music is to be played at certain times of the day or week. Ralph Walker. Each store is spritzed daily with men’s cologne in order to ensure a pleasant sensory experience. Joseph Sunlight. The company also specifies in painstaking detail how lighting, layout, visual displays, marketing, and fixtures are to be placed and used in every store. Clifford Strange. Factors such as visual presentation, music, and fragrance are not left to chance. Giles Gilbert Scott. The company strictly regulates the store environment in an effort to provide a consistent, pleasureful experience for customers in a manner that can be replicated in each store. Rowland. Because it spends little on external advertising, the company depends upon the store experience to help define the brand. Wirt C. Abercrombie & Fitch has complete control over the design and production of its merchandise, stores, and marketing. William van Alen. The company is in the process of converting all of its chain store concepts into canoe stores. George Val Myer. Unlike the chain store, which typically has a wider storefront and two entrances, the canoe store has one main entrance and is walled off into at least five rooms. James McKissack. A moose head is mounted above the cashwrap and a canoe is mounted in the main room of each canoe store. Edwin Lutyens. The interior features gray walls, white molding, polished concrete and black wood floors, metal fixtures, and large pictures of scantily-clad models. Henry Vaughan Lanchester. The canoe store is recognized by a white facade, navy blue awnings, and solid metal and glass doors. Ely Jacques Kahn. However, the company introduced a new store concept (referred to as the "canoe store" concept) in the late 1990s to accommodate its rapid growth. Raymond Hood. The store resembled a hunting lodge, with plaid carpeting, dark wood fixtures, and antler chandeliers. Charles Holden. The original store concept (referred to as the "chain store" concept) hearkened back to the outdoorsy image of company's early years. Oliver Hill. In 1996, The Limited took Abercrombie & Fitch public on the New York Stock Exchange and gradually phased out its ownership of the company. Banister Flight Fletcher. Careful marketing made the brand synonymous with wealth and status among young patrons. Ernest Cormier. The store quickly became successful, and by the mid-1990s, there were dozens of Abercrombie & Fitch stores in the United States. George Coles. The clothing produced in the 1990s was fairly consistent with the brand's preppy image and tended to be less trend-driven than today's offerings, which bear significantly less resemblence to traditional Northeastern prep school apparel. Pablo Antonio. Labels on clothing reinforce the company’s image as a casual luxury merchandiser and emphasize the quality and durability of the product. Carl Paul Jennewein. Much like Ralph Lauren (whose style is frequently evoked in Abercrombie & Fitch’s apparel), the clothing is fairly predictable: woven shirts, denim, miniskirts, cargo shorts, wool sweaters, polo shirts, and t-shirts can be found in most collections. Walter Dorwin Teague. Abercrombie & Fitch is a self-proclaimed "casual luxury" retailer. Sue et Mar. The company began opening stores in upscale malls across America in the early 1990s, targeting teenagers and college students aged 18-24 from higher-income families. Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann. Over the next decade, Abercrombie & Fitch was carefully rebuilt as a teen apparel merchandiser. Paul Manship. The Limited had been successful in rolling out new concept stores, such as Express, which sold women's clothing, and Victoria's Secret, which sold lingerie and beauty products. Tamara de Lempicka. (now called Limited Brands) acquired Abercrombie & Fitch, determined to reinvigorate the ailing brand. Jules Leleu. In 1988, The Limited Inc. René Lalique. Oshman's, a sporting goods retailer, acquired Abercrombie soon thereafter, but the company continued to struggle. Georg Jensen. Despite the chain's apparent success, the company began to falter financially in the 1960s and went bankrupt in 1977. Eileen Gray. The expansion continued through the 1960s, when the company opened new stores in Colorado Springs, Colorado; Short Hills, New Jersey; Bal Harbour, Florida; and Detroit, Michigan. Alexandra Exter. In 1939, it adopted the slogan, "The Greatest Sporting Goods Store in the World." By 1958, the company operated stores in Chicago and San Francisco, wintertime-only stores in Palm Beach and Sarasota, Florida; and summertime-only stores in Bayhead, New Jersey; and Southampton, New York. Erté (Romain de Tirtoff) (1892-1990). Despite the change in ownership, Abercrombie & Fitch continued to expand. Jean Dupas. In 1928, Ezra Fitch retired from the company. Jean Dunand. Talking was their pleasure and selling was performed only at the customers' insistence. Adolphe Mouron Cassandre. The clerks hired at Abercrombie & Fitch were not professional salesmen, but rugged outdoorsmen. "Machine age" technology such as the radio and skyscraper. The fishing section of the store alone was stocked with over 48,000 flies and over 18,000 fishing lures. Lithe athletic "modern" female forms; flappers' bobbed haircuts. It also included a desk that belonged to a fly- and bait-casting instructor who gave lessons at the pool, which was located on the roof. Animal motifs and forms; tropical foliage; ziggurats; crystals; "sunbursts"; stylized fountain motifs. The eighth floor was dedicated solely to fishing, camping, and boating. Everything associated with Jazz, Jazz Age or "jazzy". The seventh floor included a gun room, stuffed game heads, and about seven hundred shot guns and rifles. Severe forms of Neoclassicism: Boullée, Schinkel. On the sixth floor, there was a picture gallery and a bookstore that focused on sporting themes, a watch repair facility and a golf school, fully equipped with a resident professional. Fauve color palette. The second through the fifth floors were reserved for clothing that was suitable for any climate or terrain. Fractionated, crystalline, facetted form of decorative Cubism and Futurism. In the basement there was a shooting range, on the mezzanine there was paraphernalia for skiing, archery, skin-diving, and lawn games. Léon Bakst's sets and costumes for Diaghilev's Ballets Russes. The flagship store included many different amenities. Ancient Greek sculpture and pottery design of the less naturalistic "archaic period". Outside, a sign proclaimed, "Where the Blazed Trail Crosses the Boulevard.". "Primitive" arts of Africa, Egypt, or Aztec Mexico. The store occupied the entire available space, making it the world's largest sporting goods store. Early work from the Wiener Werkstätte; functional industrial design. moved yet again to a twelve-story building on Madison Avenue. In 1917, Abercrombie & Fitch Co. A&F became the first store in New York to supply such clothing to women as well as men. By 1913, the store moved to a more fashionable and easily accessible midtown address just off Fifth Avenue, expanding its inventory to include sport clothing. In 1909, Abercrombie & Fitch mailed out over its 456 page catalog, which included outdoor clothing, camping gear, articles, and advice columns, to 50,000 customers worldwide. Part of Fitch's strategy to expand the company was the creation of a mail-order catalog. A campfire blazed in one corner, where an experienced guide was always in attendance, imparting valuable information to interested customers. He set up a tent and equipped it as if it were out in the middle of the wilds of the Adirondacks. Instead, it was displayed as if in use. Stock was not hidden behind glass cabinets. Fitch determined that the store ought to have an outdoor feeling. Fitch continued the business with other partners and was, for the first time, able to direct the company in a manner to his pleasing. In 1907, Abercrombie sold his share in the company to Fitch and returned to manufacturing outdoor goods. The two quarrelled frequently, often violently, even as the company grew increasingly successful. He was positive that the future of the business lay in expansion, selling the outdoors and its delights to more of the general public. Fitch, on the other hand, was more of a visionary. Abercrombie was more conservative, content to continue the store as it was, selling professional gear to professional outdoorsmen. David Abercrombie and Ezra Fitch were stubborn, hot-tempered men, and both had vastly differing opinions on how best to run the establishment. The partnership, however, was ill-fated. In 1904, the store became incorporated and the official name of the company was changed to Abercrombie & Fitch Co. Soon thereafter, the shop moved to a larger location at 314 Broadway St. Abercrombie accepted his offer, and Fitch joined as a partner. In 1900, Ezra Fitch, a wealthy New York lawyer and loyal customer, expressed a desire to buy into the growing company. His clientele consisted mostly of professional hunters, explorers and trappers. It was his love of the great outdoors that inspired him to begin Abercrombie & Co., a shop dedicated to selling only the highest-quality camping, fishing and hunting gear. He was also an inventor, an ingenious designer of tents, rucksacks and other camping equipment. David Abercrombie, born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland, was a former trapper, prospector, topographer and railroad surveyor. Abercrombie & Fitch began as a small waterfront shop and factory in lower Manhattan in June 4, 1892. Other famous people to pass through Abercrombie & Fitch's doors include Charles Lindbergh, Amelia Earhart, Greta Garbo, Katharine Hepburn, Clark Gable, and author Ernest Hemingway, who killed himself using a shotgun purchased at an Abercrombie & Fitch store. Every president from Theodore Roosevelt to Gerald Ford is said to have been outfitted by the company in some capacity (Teddy Roosevelt was an especially enthusiastic outdoorsman and Abercrombie & Fitch customer, and he frequently visited the store in preparation for his famous African safaris). Abercrombie & Fitch not only outfitted wealthy people, it also outfitted some of America's most influential leaders and celebrities on their excursions. The company's clientele consisted of mainly big-game hunters, fishermen, and outdoorsmen. was one of the most popular retail stores for America's sporting elite. During the beginning of the 20th century, Abercrombie & Fitch Co. . states (except Wyoming) and in the District of Columbia, and 3 stores in Canada. As of 2006, the company operated 351 Abercrombie & Fitch stores in all U.S. The merchandise is sold in retail stores throughout the United States, in catalogs, and online. Abercrombie & Fitch is a specialty retailer encompassing four concepts: Abercrombie & Fitch, abercrombie (Abercrombie Kids), Hollister Co., and Ruehl no.925. Leino. VP of Stores — David L. Sr. VP of Sourcing — Diane Chang. Exec. Lennox. Communications — Thomas D. Director of Investor Relations of Corp. COO — Mike Kramer and John Lough (temporary, as of August 31 2005). VP of Logistics and Store Operations — John Lough. Exec. CFO — Mike Kramer. Chairman & CEO — Michael Jeffries. |