Clothier makes preppy return
- Share via
S.J. Cahn
Preppy is as preppy does, and as of Monday, preppy is doing
Newport-Mesa again.
After a 4 1/2 -year absence from the area, venerable clothing
company Brooks Brothers -- creator of the polo shirt and the pink
oxford for women, the company that brought seersucker (thank you very
much) and ready-to-wear suits to America -- returned to the area with
the opening of a store in South Coast Plaza.
“We really just want to reestablish ourselves as a traditional
American clothier with a luxury flair,” said Chris Holt, the store’s
manager.
Traditional, perhaps, but with a futuristic twist: Within the next
two months, the store will install a digital tailoring device that
does a full body scan for the ultimate fit.
It will be the sole one on the West Coast, Holt said. The other is
on Madison Avenue.
For those still happy pulling their clothes off shelves and
hangers, the store will sell the full assortment of Brooks Brothers’
clothing -- men’s, women’s, boys’ and made-to-wear. While there will
be a certain Southern California bent, given the warmer weather,
pieces from the company’s full fall line will be available.
“For the traveling customer,” Holt pointed out, though the
fall-theme display windows with falling foliage and footballs
suggested as much.
That traveling customer, or even one planning on staying close to
home, will find a wide assortment of items -- gloves, scarves, robes,
shoes, belts, shirts, suits, jackets, shorts, pants, ties,
handkerchiefs, suspenders, cuff links -- in a wide range of styles
and colors -- pinks, greens, yellows, blackwatch, argyle (which the
company popularized), the aforementioned seersucker and stripes (the
ties, in particular, as Brooks pioneered the diagonal-striped “Repp
tie”).
And if clothes don’t, in fact, make the man, the store also offers
the book, “How to be a Gentleman.”
It sells bow ties, too, a fact that seemed important to the crowd
of about 30 who gathered for the Monday morning opening (double that
if adding in the store’s 32 employees). Many, at one point or
another, made a joke about bow ties, or the near lack thereof on the
men wandering through the store’s almost 12,500 square feet.
Near lack, because on one counter stood a neat assortment, and
store employee Shawn McMahan was difficult to miss in his rakishly
debonair neckwear.
“I’ve been a Brooks Brothers customer since I was 4 years old,”
McMahan said. His first suit, a seersucker, was bought on Madison
Avenue.
McMahan, like his fellow employees, was less than buttoned-down in
his enthusiasm for the store’s first official day.
“It doesn’t even feel like work,” he said.
At some point it most likely will, if the high hopes of the
company’s district manager for retail in the area, Karen McKenna,
come through.
“It’s been a very successful, soft opening,” she said of the days
preceding the big grand-opening splash. “We have very high hopes.”
And with the store located on the second floor of the Carousal
Court -- where Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny and other holiday
highlights appear -- she said she’s expecting great things from the
holidays.
As are South Coast Plaza officials.
“We’re very delighted to have Brooks Brothers join our incredible
collection of stores,” said Debra Gunn Downing, South Coast Plaza’s
marketing director.
The previous Brooks Brothers store, in Fashion Island, closed in
January 2000.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.