Daily affirmations of a word mercenary
I had a near crisis shopping experience yesterday at the Alderwood Mall.
It’s very infrequently that I shop at the mall. I prefer shopping at secondhand stores (not vintage shops — secondhand stores), boutiques stocked with local designers’ work, and Rummage. But there are a few basics that require a trip to the mall, and jeans necessitate delving into the land of food courts.
For the last four years I’ve gotten all my jeans at a store called Anchor Blue. Once upon a time it was known as Miller’s Outpost, and it’s got your usual collection of boring teenager clothes (button-ups, faux-vintage Ts, bla bla), and then a wall of jeans.
The jeans fit me perfectly. We all know how hard it is to find jeans, and once you find a pair that fits just right, you know to hold tight. My size has changed through the years, but the jeans always fit me like a second skin, and I’ve bought several pairs a year since 2000. The styles vary (boot cut, flared hipster, stretch low rise) and the colors change (deep indigo, “amino washed” blue, black), but Anchor Blue has always been there for me.
I should have known the end was coming, though. Recently, I’ve had increasing troubles finding jeans that didn’t have weird thigh bleaching or “whiskers” across the crotch. Increasingly, the jeans had a strange brown wash to them, or only came in a slightly unappealing over-dyed blue.
But I persevered. This weekend I made my mecca up to the Alderwood Mall to sift through whatever dismal colors they had in the style I liked.
I arrived at Anchor Blue to find a wall of super-low stretchy no-waistband jeans. Jeans with no pockets on the back! Jeans cut so low that my ass crack was hanging out even before I did the requisite kneel-down test. Jeans so stretchy that they might as well have been running pants, but with flares. And no where to be seen were my beloved non-stretchy, non super-low boot cut jeans.
I cornered a 15 year old sales associate.
“Are these all the jeans you have?” I asked her. I realized immediately what a silly question this was: I was standing in front of a wall display 15 feet long and 8 feet high, filled with jeans. I was standing in front of hundreds of pairs of jeans. And I was asking if that was it. She assured me that yes, it was.
“What about the boot cut style?” I begged. “The ones that aren’t stretchy or super-low? The ones that have a waistband?” The associate explained that they weren’t carrying the style any more, but that I might find some on the discount rack. She tried to make me feel better by telling some story about how she totally hated stretchy jeans, too. (I appreciated her sympathy, but she was clearly lying: her jeans were painted on with an airbrush.)
Wandering back to the sales rack, I found one pair of boot cut jeans. They were a size 3, and I am not.
I wandered out of the store, heartbroken. When you’re abandoned by your favorite jeans merchandiser, it’s hard not to take it personally. The mall, not typically a friendly place, became a carnival hall of horrors. Every store featured jeans that were acid washed, super low, over-flared, under-dyed, no pockets, no waistlines, etc.
I tried a couple other teenager stores, and found the same problem. A few styles I found included “hipster stretch super-lows,” “tapered ultra-lows,” and “flared two-button lows.” I tried going to a department store, but I don’t want to pay $100 for a pair of designer jeans. labels mean less than nothing to me. I can’t even get myself to try on a pair of jeans that cost more than $50. I was in consumer hell.
After exhausting several stores in my search, on a whim I wandered into Eddie Bauer. Pastel sweaters hung in the display cases. Matronly khakis were merchandized with “just got back from a weekend in the Hamptons”-style button-up tops. I was in perhaps the most boring store known to woman.
And I found the perfect jeans there.
As I faced the Eddie Bauer wall of denim, next to a woman in her 50s who was fingering the “classic tailored” style, I had a serious identity crisis. What am I doing here? I’m not interested in the “loose fit” jeans that look like they come above your belly-button. I do not want a pair of drawstring khakis for weekending! This even worse than Anchor Blue!
Then I saw that they had a boot cut style. Then I looked at the sizes, and realized that instead of being the largest possible size (which I always am at juniors stores), my size was right in the middle. Each size came in three lengths: long, regular, and short. Colors were gently faded denim, or a standard Levi’s blue.
I tried on a pair. The waistline came just below the bellybutton, and a tiny bit above the hips. My ass was not hanging out, and when I did the kneel-down test my back tattoo showed, but my butt crack did not. The legs flared just enough, but not so much that I had raver flashbacks.
It was then that I realized that yes: I will be turning 30 next year. And yes: I think I just found my new favorite jeans at Eddie Fucking Bauer.
It was inevitable, I suppose: I still love teenager clothes, but when it comes to basics, I don’t want jeans that make a statement. Can you believe it? I just want jeans that fit. And I found them at a store for women. Not juniors, but women.
It was a strange moment for me, standing in line at Eddie Bauer listening to the painfully tasteful music piped in over the speakers. I was surrounded by women who look like they all live off of their husband’s retirement funds — but the jeans were moderately priced. I talked with the cashier about my plight. She was a middle-aged woman with frosted hair and a motherly body, and she sympathized with me. I felt sort of welcomed.
I think I’m finally an adult now. It scares me a little, but at least my ass isn’t hanging out.
Hey there. I'm Ariel Meadow Stallings, a native Seattleite who's written my way up and down the Left Coast. Electrolicious is where I post daily randomata, but I also write for a living. My first book, Offbeat Bride, is in bookstores now.
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Vera
March 28th, 2004 at 11:56 am
Awesome article.
I’m that way about bras, minus the becoming-an-adult crisis because it just doesn’t apply (I never could fit into junior bras ;-)). I only really wear one style of bra, and I have about five of them, and every time I buy a new bra, I buy another one just like it. I have been buying them at Mervyn’s for the past seven years or so. If they ever discontinued that style, I would be SO fucked. Beyond belief fucked.
patchoulli
March 28th, 2004 at 12:53 pm
Aaaah yes, the jean dilemma. I, too, have the same exact problem… and Old Navy is where I find my best fit. Problem is that their jeans don’t last UNLESS you but the non-stylish, regular plain-o jeans, which is fortunately what I prefer. I have tried so may places, and none fit this body ‘o mine like Old Navy!
rebecca
March 28th, 2004 at 2:07 pm
I feel your pain.
Meesha
March 28th, 2004 at 2:37 pm
I’ve always had trouble finding jeans that fit (thanks to the dynamic duo of Swedish and German genes) so I’ve always felt like a suburban mom in a youngster’s body.
But lately I’ve felt downright grandmotherly when I examine the fashion trends of teens. A friend of mine who teaches teenagers recently gave me a dispatch from the fashion front: “They wear jeans that are at least a size too small, and cut so low that their thongs show. And not just the skinny girls wear this, either; it’s perfectly acceptable to wear jeans so low-cut that they emphasize your fat rolls. Combine that with a belly-exposing shirt, and you’ve got an outfit.”
I feel absolutely ancient when I see the teeny boppers on the train and think to myself, “Go put something decent on–you look like a ho.” And I’m only 26!
Matt
March 28th, 2004 at 2:54 pm
You’re old. And so am I. I buy my sweaters at Marks & Spencer. I’m dismayed to discover that Doc Marten shoes (just shoes, not 6-storey-high ankle busters with chrome inserts and 20 holes) are harder to find than Osama bin Laden. I have no idea at all what to wear any more. Terribly depressing. And my prostate’s fallen out too, because I’m old.
steph
March 28th, 2004 at 9:02 pm
you know, I’ll have to check those out. I’ve been buying my jeans at old navy and yes, I feel quite shameful for it. I only hope that the eddie bauer corporation isn’t as evil as gap, inc.
Sarah B.
March 28th, 2004 at 10:00 pm
I can never find good jeans, but this winter, I actually found a pair at the Gap, where I haven’t shopped in about 10 years. Their Long & Lean stretch cut are the best thing I’ve ever put on my ass. They actually make my ass look BETTER. It’s like denim magic. $58.
Levi
March 28th, 2004 at 10:07 pm
Try being a 19 year-old guy and trying to find a pair of jeans that aren’t skin tight yet don’t hang 3 feet off your ass or have 3 extra feet on the legs!
philippe
March 29th, 2004 at 1:47 am
Excellent article, so true !
I was in London this WE with my wife’s btother, who is 25. As you surely know, teenage subcultures in London are really extreme and desinhibited. I felt really grownup…
And just to makes me feel better, as we tried to enter a pub where ‘Rock the casbah’ was blasting, my brother in law asked me if it was joy division or something… while my 7 years old son (who listen to his parents oldies) was shocked by his cluelessness.
But I’ll stick with my 501’s !
philippe
March 29th, 2004 at 1:47 am
Oh, and ‘motherly body’ is really a lovely expression !
dave
March 29th, 2004 at 6:41 am
Eddie Bauer, eh? We’ll have you driving an SUV to Junior League luncheons inside of five years. You will be assimilated. Resistance is futile.
dave
March 29th, 2004 at 6:52 am
Don’t get too used to those Eddie Bauer jeans. Eddie Bauer’s parent company, Spiegel, filed bankruptcy back in November. Both of our local Eddie Bauers have since closed.
Maggie
March 29th, 2004 at 7:18 am
Great rant, Ariel. I’m so with you. I had to abandon the teen clothing stores several years ago when my expanding midsection places me squarely out of reach of the sizes there. Now I wear a hodgepodge of jeans, picked up here n there.
I guess you’ll be on the search again shortly, since it sounds like Eddie Bauer won’t be around for long.
Geesh, it’s getting harder to establish brand-name loyalty for us 30-something body types.
dave
March 29th, 2004 at 7:50 am
wow…
apart from agreeing with you wholeheartedly about the wardrobe implications of reaching your 30’s…
i have to say, that is one of the best little essays i’ve read in a long time. it belongs on salon.com or something. brava!
dr.d. (doctorsilence.blogspot.com)
dave
March 29th, 2004 at 7:52 am
You mean the giant advertisement formerly known as Salon?
Ariel
March 29th, 2004 at 7:55 am
Dave I: I’m submitting this as a column on Hatch Magazine.
Dave II: Salon isn’t a giant advertisement if you subscribe, which I do.
Sarah
March 29th, 2004 at 8:00 am
I think I’m finally an adult now. It scares me a little, but at least my ass isn’t hanging out.
I think you have hit upon a universal truth.
Evil as they may be, I also have had good luck at Old Navy. For a while they made “curvy jeans” which were lowish (important because I’m hella shortwaisted and “normal” jeans end up sitting on my ribs) but not obscene, and made for those of us with ample hips.
dave
March 29th, 2004 at 8:27 am
I was a salon subscriber since the first day they started offering salon premium until the last renewal cycle. I just decided the quality of the content had deteriorated below the cost/benefit line. It’s sad, too, because there’s not much comparable to Salon (or at least what Salon used to be) on the web. Even though I disagreed with 80% of what I read there, the quality of the writing made it enjoyable. Plus there was plenty of good arts, entertainment and tech-related stuff. Sometimes even sports writing. But I found that as their funds dried up and their staff shrunk, the site became really one-dimensional, and there was nothing there I couldn’t get for free on countless other sites. Of course I’m not the typical salon reader anyway, so YMMV.
(By the way, if you ever try to end your Salon subscription, make sure you’ve got lots of extra space in your inbox, because they bombard you trying to get you to reconsider. I finally had to block them.)
Matt
March 29th, 2004 at 9:45 am
If you drive an SUV to that meet in five years, make sure it’s that Eddie Bauer edition Ford Explorer!!
dani
March 29th, 2004 at 10:03 am
If a store carries a brand but doesn’t have the item I want by the brand, usually the brand has a website you can find it on. But maybe you’d already thought of this.
Ariel
March 29th, 2004 at 10:10 am
Anchor Blue is both the store AND the brand of jeans, and they don’t do online sales.
Kim
March 29th, 2004 at 10:35 am
That was a great “sad but true” article that I relate to. This weekend I was short shopping, and apparantly the teen designers decided that you either can buy daisy dukes or go to the frumpy mom section. I bought neither and will try again next weekend and pray for cool weather this week.. This new style pisses me off I will be 36 this year and it is only in the last two years that I have been forced to say “back when I was a teenager….we would not be allowed to…” Sigh.
the mighty jimbo
March 29th, 2004 at 10:41 am
anchor blue is two miles from my house. i’ll totally send you some jeans if you want.
Ariel
March 29th, 2004 at 10:44 am
Thanks, Jimbo … but it’s not that the jeans weren’t available at this store — it was that the style seems to have been discontinued all together.
dave
March 29th, 2004 at 10:51 am
I’m not a fan of the latest trend in women’s jeans (low cut and tight). The number of people who can wear them and look good in them is relatively small; this style not only excludes most “grown up” women, but millions of young girls who don’t have the right shape for them. I think that’s reinforcing a lot of bad messages.
This weekend we went to a concert and, sadly, learned that many women and young girls who really shouldn’t be wearing tight lowcut jeans are wearing them anyway. We decided that these people either a) didn’t realize how bad they looked, or b) are so desperate to have the latest fashion that they’re willing to look silly in it. Having read Ariel’s post, a guess a third option must be considered: maybe they wear them for lack of available alternatives.
mark
March 29th, 2004 at 11:27 am
See also: Paco Underhill’s anthropology of the suburban shopping experience The Call of the Mall which apart from being an hoot, has a whole chapter devoted to shopping for women’s jeans.
leblanc
March 29th, 2004 at 11:29 am
the eddie bauers in berkeley/oakland have all been boarded up too… run back and stock up!!
because i refuse to pay more than $20 for a pair of jeans, i still rifle through the used (or “recycled” as they’re called here) racks. it’s a lot of hard work, and a lot of taking jeans into the dressing room that look your size on the rack and then literally barely pull up past your knees, which isn’t fun. but every few months i find a perfect, cheap, worn in pair and it’s like finding a pot of gold, i swear. to me, the time invested in doing the thrift shopping and then the incredible glee upon finding a pair that actually fits and looks good is totally worth it. all of my favorite pairs of jeans cost less than $15, but they are truly priceless to me.
now shorts - that is an entirely different world. i haven’t owned a pair of shorts for the past 5 years since my trusty old pair of cut-off jeans was deemed not-wearable-in-public by my boyfriend. i shop for shorts every season, and have yet to find a pair i’m willing to wear out of my house. i’ve resigned to skirts for that purpose.
Nikki
March 29th, 2004 at 11:40 am
You may be bummed to hear this, but I like Eddie Bauer a lot. Good sweaters, sturdy pants, etc. Appeal to my midwestern sensibilities.
But jeans come from the Levi outlet store 15 miles outside of town. Men’s jeans work wonders for us women with no hips and solid waists. Women’s jeans either have my ass swimming in material or significant digging into my waist. Men’s jeans fit waist and length, without extra hip and ass room I don’t need. Plus, Levi makes good colors, no weird stripes or coloring, and the bootcut is perfect.
patty
March 29th, 2004 at 12:02 pm
Oh my god I feel your pain!! I am turning 40 next year and have 4 kids and still a size 8 (yea for me!!), but as we all know of will find out we are not quite the girls we used to be. I find my jeans at the GAP on line. I have ordered twice and both times.. perfect fit. all styles.. and yes the famous boot cut.. Growing up sometimes sucks… The music i listen to is now being touted for Cadillac commercials.. try that one on for size.. It’s all in the attitude
puppytoes
March 29th, 2004 at 12:53 pm
Walmarts has nice jeans for under $15.00- all sizes and lengths- faded glory is the name of the brand
dawn
March 29th, 2004 at 7:47 pm
The only jeans that I can really wear now are Juicy jeans. Yes, they are in the over-$100 bracket, but they fit me. Amazingly, they have a pair that’s low-rise, but not super-low, a bit stretchy, but not like spandex, and a bit flared. And I find that they last a long, long time. So while I hate spending the money, I think it’s worth it for jeans, since I live in them.
But maybe now I’ll need to check out Eddie Bauer, too…
Julie Leung
March 29th, 2004 at 11:40 pm
Ugh. Last week I spent probably two days worth of time going clothes shopping - after ten stores finally found what I wanted, but I was getting skeptical. And I was looking for a skirt. Jeans - yikes - neither my husband nor I know where to go to find ones that fit. The ones we liked at the Gap got changed. So I read your essay intently! During my skirt shopping I stepped into Eddie Bauer and took a look- maybe I’ll go back again…thanks
Dave
March 30th, 2004 at 5:10 am
Please don’t do this to us, I’m not ready for this trip.
allie
March 30th, 2004 at 2:15 pm
OMG! I went through this same pain right around 2 New Years Eves ago, where all I wanted to do was grab a new pair of jeans or two. Yup, the NYE from 2002-2003. I was cashed for time, so I hit one of the huge malls near me in North Jerz, and spent THREE hours looking from store to store to store trying to find anything that had a decent waistband!!
Where did I finally find my perfect pair of jeans you ask? Candies of all farking places… they were still a bit snug on the thighs, but a 2 inch waistband taboot, for those of us 30 year olds who can’t have their asscracks hanging out when wearing jeans!!!
kim
March 31st, 2004 at 9:13 am
this phenomenon sucks. the majority of my pants now are somewhat low-rise just because it’s so hard to buy a pair of pants that are not low rise right now. and i get them at thrift stores! check out ebay for anchor blue.. did a quick search and a lot of jeans came up
faith
March 31st, 2004 at 11:35 am
I have the same dilemma with shorts. it’s either show your ass or wear capris (shudder). i have been lucky thoguh to have smallish hips and find the perfect shorts in the guys section. Though it’s wierd shopping in a guys section and trekking the shorts back to the girls side to try the damn things on.
tlc
March 31st, 2004 at 12:28 pm
my $100 jeans are worth every penny. plus once you know your size you can get them on e-bay for below retail.
donut
March 31st, 2004 at 6:27 pm
As you know, I love shopping at teen stores (Forever 21, anyone?), but my hips and ass have long since outgrown their boy-cut jeans. I got my recent favorite pair at Target, for $18.
Andrew
September 7th, 2007 at 10:57 am
I doubt anyone will ever come across this comment, and I will never know unless someone emails me. legitimated2@earthlink.net
Anyways, I work at an Anchor Blue in Lakeland Florida. We have the stretchy no pocket crap as well. They’re called “Poppy”. However, we also have a massive jean wall loaded with Daisy, Lilac, and Jasmine. All of which come in Boot Cut styles.
Just wanted to defend my chain.