It started as a window display stunt when Istanbul-based garment producers, Asflas, displayed some short (very short) skirts fashioned from fur in their shop-front window.
They caught the fashion mood of the moment in soft, sheep fur, dyed in fashion colours. They were unlined and skimpy for the winter season. Price $150.
An Antalya retailer saw them and scooped up a score or so and sold them for $350. Several Russian ladies in Antalya saw them and passed the fashion tip along to friends and the items were a sell-out at $750.
Russians define markets wherever they are but Antalya, on Türkiye’s Mediterranean coast, enjoys a mild winter climate and the ‘skimpy skirt’ is probably not what your average Muscovite is wearing.
Meanwhile in London, Marks and Spencer’s reported run-away sales on their Turkish-produced ankle-length coats.
These are lambskin and fully lined with combed and dyed sheep’s fleece. About 1,000 moved off the Oxford Street racks in under an hour.
The price tag was £600 – a loss-leading item, compared with the £1,200 that a designer label would command.
Few are deterred from the feel of fur or the look of leather, regardless of seasons.