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By Barbara Woller
WEST NYACK - It's said
that to succeed in business an entrepreneur must find an unmet need
and fill it.
Brothers Michael and Nicholas
Kaplan said that's just what they're doing with Fashion to Figure,
a specialty store for women's plus-size apparel that they opened
in October at the Palisades Center in West Nyack. "I think
the market opportunity is vast," Michael Kaplan said. "There's
a need for this offering all across America."
Not only is there demand
for plus-size clothes there is supply as well, with about 2,000
companies that manufacture clothes for larger women, he said.
"We thought it presented
a great opportunity to sit in the middle as the retailer,"
Michael Kaplan said of his business, which is backed by professional
investors.
Michael Kaplan is chief
executive and Nicholas Kaplan is chief operating officer, but they
call themselves "partners."
There is no Fashion to
Figure "label." The store sells a variety of brands, such
as Erika, Fashion Trend and Club-Z. The Kaplans say that makes it
easier to find a fit because different manufacturers cut clothes
different ways.
"Unlike some other
retailers, we don't have a 'standard fit,' " Nicholas Kaplan
said. "If you come here and we have 12 pairs of jeans, I guarantee
you'll find a fit. Some may be shorter or longer but you'll find
one that fits."
The brothers also said
they customized the store with larger women in mind, offering amenities
such as larger fitting rooms and chairs on the sales floor.
"A more established
retailer might say 'you're sacrificing selling space,' " Nicholas
Kaplan said. "But in our view we feel it is really critical
to the customer experience to have a place to relax."
Kurt Barnard, president
of Barnard's Retail Trend Report, said it is important that plus-size
women have more retailers to choose from."Plus-size clothing
is an unserved and underserved market," Barnard said. "There
are so many women who need plus sizes and not enough selection for
them to pick from."
Dana Telsey, a retail analyst
with Bear Stearns, also said more such stores are needed. "While
many department stores do contain 'large-size' sections for women,
they are otten relegated to understated parts of the floor space,"
she wrote in a March report.
Further, the nation is
getting heavier.
Just over 51 percent of
women were considered overweight between 1988 and 1994 compared
to 62 percent in the 1999 to 2002 period, according to the National
Center for Health Statistics.
The sheer number of baby
boomers is driving growth, too, said George Whalin, president and
chief executive of Retail Management Consultants.
"As we get older,
we get larger," Whalin said. "(Also) within that baby
boom generation there are not just larger women, but women with
money to spend."
Fashion to Figure sells
clothes in sizes 14 to 26. Other plus-size apparel retailers are
Charming Shoppes Inc., which sells under three distinct brands:
Lane Bryant, Fashion Bug and Catherines Plus Sizes.
Montebello-based Dress
Barn is in the plus-size market through its Dress Barn Woman stores.
And some wholesalers have started new brands to target the segment,
such as Elisabeth from Liz Claiborne.
The Kaplans are 30-something
bachelors who live in Manhattan and describe their store as "a
full-fashion oasis for women."
One recent afternoon the
store beckoned customers with spring fashions in bright turquoise,
yellow, green, and pink, as well as soft pastel shades. The merchandise
includes casual separates, T-shirts, jeans, slacks and special occasion
outfits.
"Denim is our No.
1 business but not far behind that is our tops business," Nicholas
Kaplan said. The Miss Vigos and Revolt brands are among the denim
jeans it sells.
Mindy Hernandez of Wesley
Hills, a Fashion to Figure salesperson, herself wears plus-size
clothes. The Kaplans prefer to call their salespeople "stylists"
because they help customers coordinate outfits.
"I wasn't happy with
the selections at other stores," Hernandez said in between
helping customers. "Other full-figure stores were very limited
- 'square' I call it - very boxy clothes for an older generation.
These are more youthful 'fun 'clothes."
Customer Karen Nichson
of the Bronx, at the store for the first time, said it is hard to
find clothes in her size. She was looking for "something dressy"
but her eyes also drifted over to the racks of colorful T-shirts.
"The colors drew me in," she said.
Michael and Nicholas Kaplan
say their interest in plus-size clothing is in their genes.
They are great-grandsons
of Lena H. Bryant, the founder of the Lane Bryant chain, which started
to make clothes for larger women more than a century ago.
The family has had no connection
with Lane Bryant since it was sold in 1982 to The Limited, which
sold it to Charming Shoppes in 2001.
The Kaplans say their great-grandmother's
story has inspired them throughout their lives.
She was a widow in the
late 19th century, and to make ends meet she pawned a pair of diamond
earrings to get a sewing machine and started to make couture dresses
for women in her neighorhood," Michael Kaplan said.
When a pregnant woman asked
Bryant if she could make clothes for her, Bryant came up with the
idea of an elastic waistband. Her second husband saw the business
opportunity for special-size clothes and she was on her way.
Today, Michael and Nicholas
Kaplan bring different but complementary knowledge to their business.
Michael Kaplan has a master's
of business administration degree from the Harvard Business School
and previously co-founded aIight.com, an online site for full-figured
women that was bought by Charming Shoppes five years ago. He has
also worked as a venture capitalist.
Nicholas Kaplan brings
17 years of experience in the retail industry. He was a co-founder
and managing partner of The Designer Wearhouse, general merchandise
manager at bluefly.com and a buyer at Saks Inc.
This is the first business
venture together for the duo, who grew up in Manhattan and had a
weekend home in Bedford.
The Fashion to Figure store
at the Palisades Center will be the flagship for the chain the Kaplans
hope to develop in the Northeast. Michael Kaplan said they are now
in active negotiations in the tri-state area and "absolutely
hope to have a store in Westchester."
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