Leggings, once derided, now uniform of covid

When Vice President-elect Kamala Harris called to congratulate Joe Biden on winning the election, she was wearing what women everywhere in the United States seem to be wearing during the pandemic: leggings.

Leggings have been a staple of workouts, errands and lounging at home for well over a decade now, but wearing them often came with a slew of excuses: I just got back from the gym. I'm bloated. It's the weekend.

But in the covid-19 era, the line between workout clothes and work clothes has evaporated for many people -- and with it, any feelings of shame about wearing leggings 24/7.

Indeed, while sales of denim jeans have fallen since March, leggings sales have surged 61% in the United Kingdom and 21% in the United States compared with the same period last year, according to WGSN, a trend forecasting agency in London.

Maggie Schneider, 21, front woman of an Atlanta rock band called Glimmers, never wore leggings out of the house before the pandemic. Her look was very '70s bohemian, lots of jeans and cute, flowy sundresses.

But her last music gig was March 10; two weeks later, Atlanta issued a citywide stay-at-home order. That was when her leggings broke free.

"It started as a comfort thing," said Schneider, who studies writing at Savannah College of Art and Design. "As time progressed, the comfort thing turned into me liking to wear them. And I thought, 'I'm going to embrace this.'"

Her leggings -- she prefers the black ones from Target -- are now her daily pandemic look, often paired with a band T-shirt. She wears them during her livestream shows, while shopping for old clothes and for her acoustic guitar mashups on TikTok.

Leggings have been gaining in popularity in the last decade, especially among millennials and the wellness set. They have also created controversy, often for being perceived as too revealing.

Two teenage girls were kicked off a United Airlines flight for wearing leggings in 2017. Schools in Evanston, Ill., and Kenosha, Wis., have prohibited girls from wearing them. Students held pro-leggings protests at the University of Notre Dame after a self-described "Catholic mother of four sons" wrote a letter in the student newspaper saying that "leggings are so naked, so form-fitting, so exposing."

But since the pandemic, the debate seems to have become moot, as leggings go from merely popular to ubiquitous.

What's different now? "The unspoken rules about sartorial standards don't apply when nobody is in a social situation," said Deirdre Clemente, a fashion historian at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. "No one's going into the office now. Many girls aren't going into school where teachers are telling you to go home and change out of your leggings."

This is exactly why Sarah Seltzer, 37, an editor for Lilith Magazine who lives in Harlem, N.Y., wears her leggings all day, from the time she feeds her two children breakfast, and her daily Zoom editorial meetings, to her walks in the park. "They're very trendy apparently," said Seltzer, who often wears a pair that's bright blue and tie-dyed by Pact Apparel. "I've seen a lot of young women in my neighborhood wearing them."

Laura Yiannakou, a womenswear senior strategist for WGSN, thinks the rise is about more than just comfort. Leggings, she said, appeal to women who want to celebrate their natural figure. "It's not shapewear in the sense of wanting to make you look three sizes smaller," she said. "It's a parallel trend of inclusivity and body positivity."

You can call this frivolous if you want, this talk about leggings. But fashion is a moving, breathing entity and changes whenever there's a great upheaval in society, such as a war -- or a pandemic.

"I don't think we can separate the pandemic from fashion," said Rhonda Garelick, dean of the School of Art and Design History and Theory at Parsons. "We are frightened, we are hiding and our bodies feel deeply vulnerable. But privately, indoors, we've never been freer."

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