I Know It When I See It

People often ask me how to spot new trends. It is an elusive subject, and I
honestly don't know if it is something that is innate, or a talent that can be
learned. I do know that anybody who goes into retail or design better have at
least a little bit of trend-spotting skills, or they will be lost when trying to
make choices for what will sell 6 months or a year from now!

Color
Forecasting is one type of trend-spotting. Pantone has taken the art of color
forecasting to the level of a Breaking News item, with their Color of the Year.
We may well ask, what does the Color of the Year
mean? Is it something that is selling well at retail right now, something that
we'll see flooding the stores for the next year, or something designers should
be putting in their next collection?

Well, it is all 3, depending on what
industry, what price point, what area of the US (or the world!), and what age of
the customer…. and a few other market variables. A trend that is hot in New
York or Los Angeles now, can take 2 to 3 years to reach saturation in the
Heartland… sometimes longer!

To illustrate my point, on the evolvement
of trends over time and distance, I am going to tell you a story.

About
10 years ago when all the eyeglass designs were of small rectangle lenses, those
of us who actually want to SEE out of our glasses, became very frustrated. (I've
worn glasses since I was 10, and can't function without them.) Every eyeglass
shop I went to had the same teeny frames. For the last 10 years I've bought
stylish funky frames from France, because I didn't
want to have glasses that looked like everyone else
. In the meantime I
hunkered down and waited for this small eyeglass trend to pass. Unfortunately it
lasted for a very long time, and as I graduated to progressive lenses, I had
even less space to see through because my lenses were divided into 3 zones of 3
different prescriptions. Ack!

Then while I was in New York last week, I
saw the eyeglass frames of my dreams! I saw them worn by a young woman in a
restaurant. She probably wondered why I kept staring at her. (I was committing
the design to memory, but was too shy to go ask her where she got them.) I came
back home and spent a week hassling my local hipster
eyeglass
stores, trying to figure out who makes these frames!

The
closest thing I could find was on a blog in Europe. I went to my local eyeglass
shop that carries this brand, and was told that style had not even been released
in France yet, and it wasn't possible that I had actually seen them online, and
they wouldn't be sold to the US market anyway. Sigh…

Meanwhile the
market is saturated with tons of tiny rectangle frame glasses. Personally I like
larger lenses – preferably in a Cats Eye or Retro style. I know this style is
coming, and it may take 3 more years for it to filter down to the hippest
eyeglass shop in Boulder. In the meantime versions of this design are in New
York and Paris, probably Rome and Milan too, and I am determined to get my hands
on a pair.

This is one way of spotting a trend.

So when you are
wondering – what is the next big trend? – take this advice I got from my first
boss as a young fashion designer:

"I'll know it when I see
it!"

Speaking of which, if you are a Modern Quilter, be sure to snap up a
copy of the new
Modern Patchwork Magazine
. After I saw the preview copy last week, we
doubled our autoship!

May you finish your tax forms early this weekend,
so you can have fun looking at all the new
fabric trends
on our website. *wink*

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About Luana

eQuilter.com has the largest online selection of quilt fabrics and quilting accessories. Over 1000 new products per month, are introduced in the weekly e-newsletters. 2% of sales is given to charity. Located in Boulder, Colorado. Independently owned by husband and wife (aka Mom and Pop) Luana and Paul Rubin.
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4 Responses to I Know It When I See It

  1. Claudia says:

    I soooo understand your comments on glasses frames. I have worn glasses since I was 9, so there isn’t much new out there that hasn’t been around once in the last 50 yrs. I was looking for new frames last year and had my heart set on a red pair. Could find them on the internet between $9/pr to $400/pr (without lenses) but couldn’t be had locally. Finally settled for a wine/brown pair that are the right shape, but I’m still waiting for the right red pair to show up. Good luck hunting.

  2. Sheila M. says:

    I, too, have been waiting impatiently for larger eyeglass frames to come back. I live in NYC and I recently saw some larger frames in a store window!
    Luckily I saved a pair of glasses from about 20 years ago that I can now wear again. I just have to visit my opthamologist to get a new prescription and then will have that put into my old, larger frames, that are quite beautiful.
    Thanks so much for sharing this info. I feel great that I spotted this trend too.

  3. Susan says:

    I was hoping that you were going to point me to my new glasses. Three more years is a LONG time ……

  4. Paula Moser-Spaulding says:

    Oh i could not agree more! Since i rarely wear my glasses in public, preferring my contact lenses for day use, i have frames from 1994 that i have been updating with new lenses– much to the consternation of my family! I too need to SEE! I’ve started to see some bigger frames coming back locally, not terribly stylish versions, but like you i trust them to return eventually! Thanks for your posts, btw! They are always a high spot in my week!

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