Coronavirus fashion: Our quarantine wardrobes include more pajamas, fewer bras and pants - USA TODAY |
- Coronavirus fashion: Our quarantine wardrobes include more pajamas, fewer bras and pants - USA TODAY
- Survey: Mass. residents ditching pants, razor blades, makeup during coronavirus quarantine - Boston News, Weather, Sports | WHDH 7News
- Pants, bras are out, PJs in; travel industry layoffs begin - WSET
- Why are Hermann Goering's pants inside a western N.C. jail? - Statesville Record & Landmark
| Coronavirus fashion: Our quarantine wardrobes include more pajamas, fewer bras and pants - USA TODAY Posted: 14 May 2020 08:13 AM PDT Where does the U.S. stimulus money come from? Here's how the Federal Reserve is saving the economy from the COVID-19 crisis. USA TODAY Bottoms down, wearing pants without an elastic waist or a bra daily is so pre-COVID-19. With millions working from home or unemployed due to the coronavirus, quarantine wardrobes opt for comfort versus restricted clothes, be it shape wear or even simply jeans. And new data supports the claims that have already been memorialized both in memes on social media and the butt of many coronavirus jokes. According to Adobe Analytics, April was a record month for apparel, with prices decreasing 12% from March. The cuts helped apparel gain a 34% increase in sales. But consumers shifted their apparel purchases toward comfortable home clothes. Adobe found pants sales dropped 13%, bras 12% and jackets 33% while online pajama sales increased a whopping 143%. Bonus time: Walmart, Sam's Club giving hourly employees coronavirus cash bonuses worth $390M in June More shopping venues coming soon: Simon Property Group reopening more malls as more states reopen amid coronavirus Retailers have reported similar trends as video conferencing and remote work have grown in popularity. In late March, Walmart reported an increase in shirt sales but not work clothing below the waist. "We're seeing increased sales in tops, but not bottoms," Dan Bartlett, Walmart's executive vice president of corporate affairs, told Yahoo Finance about people who use Zoom and other types of video conferencing. Summer clothing was also popular in April, with sales of shorts up 67% and t-shirts 47%, according to Adobe. Going braless during COVID-19Harper's Bazaar raised the question in April of whether we will ever wear bras again. The magazine asked whether going bra-free was a feminist statement or so comfortable we might never go back. Shape magazine took on the pros and cons of going braless and how doing so affects breasts in an April article. While the magazine said bras are essential for workouts, the experts were split on sagging. However, Shape concluded in these times "it's more important than ever to do things that make you feel good and comfortable. And if not wearing a bra for a while will do that, then so be it. Your girls will be okay." Bras as face masks?With bras hung up or stuffed in drawers, some have found a new use for them – DIY face masks. Several tutorials are available on YouTube showing how to repurpose the cup of the bra and a strap, some adjustable around your head. But word of warning, the bra masks might not work depending on your cup size and may lead to some laughs. Facebook user Ciara Frazier's March 1 post went viral and as of Wednesday has more 239,000 shares. "On YouTube watching this woman make face mask with her bra for Coronavirus so I decided I was going to make some with my old bras I can't see and I can't breathe," Frazier joked. Looking for a face mask?: Retailers such as Old Navy make them for kids and adults More masks: These retailers are selling stylish face masks Share your thoughts with USA TODAYFill out the form below or through this link for possible inclusion in USA TODAY's continuing COVID-19 coverage. Follow USA TODAY reporter Kelly Tyko on Twitter: @KellyTyko Read or Share this story: https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2020/05/13/coronavirus-clothes-work-clothes-pajamas-braless-pantless-zoom/5181891002/ |
| Posted: 14 May 2020 08:25 AM PDT BOSTON (WHDH) - Many Massachusetts residents have ditched their pants, razor blades, and makeup over the course of the last couple of months as they work from home to prevent the spread of coronavirus, a new survey found. Fishbowl, a workplace social network, recently explored virtual meetings and how they impact employee's professional attire and appearance while on the clock. Female users were asked, "How has your makeup routine changed since work from home started?" Male users were asked, "Have your shaving habits changed since work from home started?" In Massachusetts, 54 percent of women said that have completely stopped putting on makeup, while nearly 30 percent of men admitted that they have stopped shaving. With Zoom and other video conferencing now the norm, Fishbowl said it also wanted to know if employees are focusing less on their attire while working from home. They asked users, "Do you wear pants while on video conference calls?" One in 10 users across America admitted to wearing only underwear below the belt during video conference calls. In Massachusetts, 12.52 percent answered with jeans, 7.54 percent answered with just underwear, 78.93 percent answered with pajamas, sweats, shorts or leggings, and just 1.02 percent answered with professional attire. Click here for more coronavirus coverage. (Copyright (c) 2020 Sunbeam Television. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.) |
| Pants, bras are out, PJs in; travel industry layoffs begin - WSET Posted: 12 May 2020 10:31 AM PDT [unable to retrieve full-text content]Pants, bras are out, PJs in; travel industry layoffs begin WSET |
| Why are Hermann Goering's pants inside a western N.C. jail? - Statesville Record & Landmark Posted: 13 May 2020 09:00 AM PDT ![]() There are a lot of mysteries in life that have no reasonable explanation. Like why is the price of gas always higher around Statesville than anyplace else? Why do people still smoke cigarettes? Why am I always at the end of the four in a row when I cut on the radio, and what are Hermann Goering's pants doing in a western N.C. jail? Yes, in an old county brick jailhouse in the western part of N.C. is a pair of Hermann Goering's pants. Reichsmarschall Hermann Wilhelm Göring (Goering) was a Nazi military and political leader who at one point was second only to Adolf Hitler in Germany and the Nazi party. Goering had served in World War I as a German fighter pilot ace and was the last commander of the "Jagdgeschwader," the fighter wing once led by Manfred von Richthofen (The Red Baron). Goering became a supporter of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi party in the early 1920s. When Hitler became chancellor of Germany in 1933, Goering became minister without portfolio and created the Gestapo, Hitler's official secret police force that would later take part in the Jewish Holocaust. Hitler designated Goering as his successor and created the rank of Reichsmarschall, making Goering senior officer over all the German armed forces. Goering served as the commander in chief of the German air force, known as the Luftwaffe, and stole priceless artworks from the areas Germany occupied. After the war Goering was arrested and tried at the Nuremberg trials in 1946 for war crimes. The night before he was to be hanged, Goering committed suicide by taking cyanide. This now brings us to former Statesville High School football star Red Watt. No, Red didn't slip him a cyanide tablet, but he did steal his pants. William Neri "Red" Watt was born on April 15, 1910 in Iredell County to William Alexander and Margaret Elizabeth Patterson Watt. Red was an outstanding athlete who played football, basketball and baseball and ran track before graduating from Statesville High School (in the D. Matt Thompson building) in 1929. Red led Statesville to the N.C. state football championship game against Wilmington in Chapel Hill in 1928. Watt graduated from N.C. State University in 1933 with a degree in civil engineering. On Feb. 24, 1943, he enlisted in the U.S. Army, serving in the 44th Infantry and 71st infantry divisions of Patton's Third Army. During World War II, he served in U.S. Army Intelligence as a topographic draftsman and did aerial photo interpretation. Red was responsible for providing detailed maps for the 71st as it advanced into Germany. He later wrote of the Division's final push as the 66th Infantry of the 71st swept into Neuhaus. "On a high bluff behind a stone wall, we saw Hermann Goering's 500-year old castle. After a short fight with some SS troops, who retreated into the woods, the castle was taken late one afternoon." The major who was in charge of the convoy decided to take a break in Neuhaus. Red and the major took advantage of the stop to tour Goering's castle. "The major had to return to the convoy, and I told him that I would hang around and catch a ride to the next town later. After looking at some of the expensive tapestries, oriental rugs, and art I realized that I was the only American soldier in the castle with servants (Nazis working for Goering) everywhere. Even though I had a pistol, I cut my tour short after I visited the dining room and a bedroom. I confiscated Goering's signatures from books, a bridge scoring pad, and his pants from the bedroom. The pants were knickers, and his name was in the waistband, probably in his own handwriting." Red Watt would recall that "in the last few days before May 8, 1945, it was "if you don't shoot, we will not shoot" as the Germans began to surrender. He accompanied the 71st Division to Styr, Austria on the Enns River, where more than 60,000 Germans surrendered to the Americans before the Russians arrived. "They had a smile on their faces, and you would never think that they were enemies." William N. "Red" Watt was discharged on Oct. 31, 1945. He received the EAMET Service Medal, American Theater Service Medal, and Good Conduct Medal for his service in the war. He saw action in the battles of the 71st Infantry Division from Bitche, France, to Styr, Austria. After the war, Red worked in the U.S. Soil Conservation Service in Sparta, Ga., for 32 years before returning to North Carolina after retirement. The pants he liberated in Germany were later donated to a county historical society whose office today is in an old former county jail building. The pants are huge. Goering packed on a lot of weight by the 1940s and looked nothing like a fighter pilot. As he grew bigger, so did the pants as tailors sewed pieces of cloth into the pants to expand their size. The Allies were careful not to mistreat the German prisoners awaiting trial at Nuremberg. Army doctors examining Goering found him to be obese and put him on a diet which greatly reduced his size by the time the trials began. Red would combine his love of history and his skills in map reading to conduct historical and genealogical research publishing seven historical books including, "Statesville My Home Town 1789-1920" in 1996, and the N.C. Society of Historians award winning "The Granville District" in 1992. He assisted in the publication of both the Iredell and Alexander County Heritage books. Red passed away at age 87 on March 30, 1998 and is buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Statesville. |
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