Leggings In Loud Prints Are A Hit And More Flattering Than Most Women Expect
At Bandier, a Manhattan suitability boutique, one of the most accepted racks is packed with Branded Leggings that collection from pretty to pretty funny: They are covered in loud prints of pink blossoms or green kale, neon-pixel designs or emesis.
The age of simple, black leggings or yoga pants as the worldwide exercises bottoms appears to be over. Instead, yoga classes, boutique fitness studios and successively trails are filled with Spandex leggings in look-at-me prints, often from brands that aren't exactly domestic names. Devotees assure the patterned leggings are more satisfying—and just more fun—than their dull brethren for Buy Women Leggings.
"We can scarcely keep them in stock," says Donna Burke, managing colleague of Atlanta Active wear, in Georgia, which newly sell out of $74 "Malibu" scene-printed leggings from Onsite, a four-year-old Los Angeles company. In the past year or so, sales of printed leggings "went from very smallest to an unqualified have-to-have style," Ms. Burke says.
Liz Kelley, who workings at an Austin, Texas, software company, wears leggings that have one-half of a tiger’s face on each thigh. "They were so absurd, I couldn't not buy them," Ms. Kelley says. "They make peoples nicer."
Not every person wants to Buy Printed Leggings emphasize their thighs with a detonation of color. "I hate decorative leggings" and "decorative leggings are ugly" posts flourish on social media. "I'm just the type of person that likes black or gray or navy," says Melissa Scott, a payroll boss in Augusta, Ga., who practice yoga and lifts weights. Patterned leggings, she says, "represent too much interest when you’re in the gym. They’re just too thunderous."
Yet many people who wear them started out as skeptics, variety and store owner say. Rebecca McCracken, organizer of Altar Ego, an Andover, collection. Athletic-wear Company says women might start out substitute a "gateway" legging in a black-based print, such as her propose with a red-and-white skull on the side.
Sales of Latest Girls Leggings superior 18% in 2014 to $1.1 billion, with sales of "active" leggings increasing twice as fast as leggings in general, according to NPD Group. In the crowded "at-leisure" section, print do the trick of present shoppers more reasons to purchase.