Push-up bra sales sag as big breasts fall out of fashion

Sales of push-up bras have started to sag with big breasts seemingly becoming out of fashion due to the popularity of ‘less curvy’ celebrities. 

Retailer John Lewis recorded a 44 per cent plunge in sales of the gravity-defying lingerie compared to last year’s sales thanks in part to stars such as Cara Delevinge.

Women are instead opting for a more comfortable bra, ditching their desire for a cleavage. 

Sales of push-up bras (left) have started to sag with big breasts seemingly becoming out of fashion due to the popularity of ‘less curvy’ celebrities (right)

Retailer John Lewis recorded a 44 per cent plunge in sales of the gravity-defying lingerie compared to last year's sales

Retailer John Lewis recorded a 44 per cent plunge in sales of the gravity-defying lingerie compared to last year’s sales

Non-padded bras have gone the other way with their sales up by around a fifth compared to the previous year.  

John Lewis’ assistant lingerie buyer Alanna Leow-McKenna told The Sun: ‘Gone are the days women longed to push up their cleavage.

‘Instead there’s greater priority on functional and comfortable lingerie.’

Satnavs, eReaders, spiralizers and office suits for women all followed the push-up bra and fell out of fashion over the last year as consumers turned to products that helped them ‘escape from the serious side of life’.

The department store’s annual report into shopping trends suggests the last year’s economic and political uncertainty could in part explain why shoppers sent sales of online pool inflatables up 99 per cent on the previous year, mermaid-themed products up 22 per cent and why unicorns were emblazoned on everything from wallets to water bottles.

Instead of the push-up bras, like these M&S ones, women are opting for a more comfortable bra, ditching their desire for a cleavage

Instead of the push-up bras, like these M&S ones, women are opting for a more comfortable bra, ditching their desire for a cleavage

The report said ‘a touch of the exotic and the fantastic helped people escape from the serious side of life’.

‘Unicorn and mermaid-themed products and giant inflatables in the shape of donuts, flamingos and watermelons were all on-trend and saw substantial sales,’ it stated.

The retailer said it planned to remove satnavs from its stocklist after built-in devices and smartphone options sent sales plummeting, while the spiralizer fad ended abruptly with online searches down 53 per cent and shoppers bought fewer eReaders and analogue radios.

The traditional office suit for women appears to be heading out of fashion, with sales of matching jackets and skirts down 10 ten percent.

While menswear saw strong sales of bow ties over the last 12 months, demand for the cummerbund fell 21 per cent over the last five years.

Meanwhile, products that made an unexpected return to favour included bookcases, the Rubik’s Cube, record players and filofaxes.

Peter Cross, director of customer experience at John Lewis, said: ‘How we shop continues to change at pace.

‘Five years on, this report is as intriguing as ever – as much for highlighting what we bought as highlighting what we haven’t.’

 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk