Wednesday, March 3, 2021

A Year Later, How Are Fashion Rental Companies Doing?

When lockdown put a halt to our social and office lives, our closets were the first to feel the effects. With nowhere to go and no one to see, we abandoned the majority of our clothing in favor of a uniform of sweatsuits and house dresses. As many cut back on any unnecessary expenses, fashion became even less important, which led many to discontinue their clothing rental subscriptions.

Though none of the rental companies I spoke with shared figures, all confirmed that they’ve seen a dip in orders and an increase in membership cancellations and pauses since the pandemic first took hold of the U.S. last March. However, by last summer, many customers returned, though it’s unclear whether subscriptions have caught up to pre-pandemic numbers. 

We’re still under lockdown — so what’s changed? According to Ambika Singh, the CEO of Armoire, a clothing membership company that offers contemporary brands like Rag&Bone, Equipment, and Scotch & Soda, people have begun to dress up again at home, just because: “Even though women weren’t seeing as many people as they were in their pre-pandemic lives, they were already accustomed to dressing for themselves and giving themselves the boost they needed for the day.” Today, Armoire has more “tenured customers” than ever, a term that refers to people who have been using the service for nine-plus months. According to Nuuly, the rental service from URBN that also owns Urban Outfitters, Anthropologie, and Free People, the company has seen a resurgence of memberships with each new season, with more expected to come in the spring and summer as a result of vaccine rollouts and outdoor events. 

This might explain why plus-size brand ELOQUII went ahead with the launch of its rental service, ELOQUII Unlimited, in August. Though the service was in the works prior to March 2020, according to CEO Mariah Chase, research found that the customers still wanted it. “80% of women sizes 14-28 agreed that a clothing rental subscription service would give them the wardrobe flexibility they needed as their lifestyle evolved during uncertain times,” she says. 

Some of this pandemic success is due to the communities these companies intentionally built. Armoire launched initiatives like the “digital dressing room,” where members can upload photos of themselves in the rented clothes to a shared feed. Others, like ELOQUII Unlimited, updated their offerings to include styles that are more relevant for at-home life with a loungewear launch in the fall. Nuuly, too, re-evaluated its category and brand mix, by expanding its maternity and plus-size offerings (something its customers requested) and, generally, leaning into both casual aesthetics and also “mood-lifting” styles.

“Casual has been the theme of the last year, but our subscribers still approached [their lives] through a fashion lens,” says Kim Gallagher, Nuuly’s Director of Marketing and Customer Success. “They loved our assortment of glam casual, like sequin and velvet joggers.” (I know the exact pair of sequin drawstring pants that Gallagher is talking about, because, coincidentally, they were the last item I ordered while testing Nuuly in February and March of last year just as things were starting to look grim.)

“Fashion has always been about self-expression, and rental gives consumers access to a wardrobe far larger and more varied than it would make sense to own.”

Christine Hunsicker, founder and CEO of CaaStle

Christine Hunsicker is the founder and CEO of logistics company CaaStle that grew out of the success of her previous company, clothing-subscription brand Gwynnie Bee (which is now a subsidiary), and now powers services for rentals like ELOQUII Unlimited, Vince Unfold, and Banana Republic Style Passport, among others. According to Hunsicker, the rise of video conferencing presented a new need for the market: “We’ve found our members gravitating toward tops [even if] they may have selected more dresses in the past,” she says, also listing comfier, less structured wardrobe essentials like cashmere sweaters as the top-requested styles. Melissa Gonzalez, fashion retail expert and CEO of The Lion’esque Group, confirms that people still think of their outfits, but with the computer angle in mind. “From the waist up, we’re staring at each other more than we ever have, so I think there’s a desire there to make it fresh and feel good about that stuff again,” she says.

Then there’s the reason why many loyalists never canceled their rental subscriptions, to begin with. “Adding new items to our wardrobe and the thrill of receiving those packages is still a source of real joy. Even though we are leaving our houses less, we still do have a need to get dressed and feel good every day,” Hunsicker says when I ask her why she thinks people continue to rent clothing. “We received daily feedback from our members who shared that the arrival of their boxes on their doorstep would be a highlight of their week and a way that they could treat themselves.”

This is the same reason that drew people to rental services when they first came around: the joy of being able to wear designer clothes that we otherwise couldn’t afford and try styles that we would be too afraid to commit to long-term. “Fashion has always been about self-expression, and rental gives consumers access to a wardrobe far larger and more varied than it would make sense to own,” says Hunsicker. 

It’s also more sustainable than buying new clothes. COVID-19 forced many to reconsider their shopping habits, as they faced their own excess, with closets overflowing with clothes that we barely wore in regular times, let alone a pandemic. As such eco-friendly alternatives of consuming fashion, like resale and renting, that have already been on the rise, will only continue to get more popular. “We as consumers have a part to play in rebuilding the post-pandemic world to be more equitable and kind to Mother Earth,” says Singh. “Rental fashion will have a boom like never before.” Gonzalez agrees that the future of rental looks promising, adding that, in addition to being more sustainable, it’s also a more economical alternative to buying a brand-new closet.

“As long as brand partnerships are continuing to happen, and the inventory is exciting, and consumers are getting access to brands that they coveted… [rental] continues to be really valuable.”

Melissa Gonzalez, CEO of The Lion’esque Group

According to Gonzalez, it’s not just the customers that benefit from rental but also brands who want to get themselves in front of customers. “It still makes a lot of sense for brands to offer rental because it’s a great entry point into a customer getting to know your brand,” she says. “As long as brand partnerships are continuing to happen, and the inventory is exciting, and consumers are getting access to brands that they coveted before but maybe that they couldn’t afford, it continues to be a really valuable proposition.” Just this week, Ralph Lauren launched a rental initiative with the Lauren Ralph Lauren brand (also powered by CaaStle). While talking to WWD, David Lauren, the company’s chief innovation and brand officer, said, “We really thought that Lauren was an interesting place to start. It was a brand that had lost some traction. We thought this was a way to re-spark interest and curiosity around it.”

Gonzalez says that she expects that rental fashion will continue to be popular with the consumer: “People are excited to be going out again, especially as we are getting vaccines and the warmer weather is coming.” Then there is the future in which we’ll (presumably, hopefully) be returning to events like weddings and large social gatherings. With that in mind, according to Gallagher, rental companies are well-positioned to fill the fashion needs that will arise as people return to special occasions and travel. “As we emerge from the pandemic and consumers have more occasions to dress for, we believe the value proposition of accessing a rotating closet will increase along with demand,” says Chase.

Because by then, who even knows what we’ll want to wear after a year and some away from our closets? Will our style be as it was pre-pandemic? Will it be comfort-first forever? 

“As we return to pre-pandemic activities, there is a big question about what wardrobes will look like: Is the elastic waist here to stay or will yoga pants be left behind in quarantine?” says Hunsicker. “Rental services will deliver a real value proposition to consumers looking to get dressed without making commitments to a post-pandemic wardrobe.”

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21 Shackets To Carry You Through Transitional Dressing Season

Transitional dressing can be a bit of a doozy. One day it’s too toasty for the thick, cozy coat you lived in over winter, and the next day your go-to denim jacket isn’t holding up against a chilly front. What do you wear to tackle this confusing in-between time? Enter the shacket, It’s the shirt-meets-jacket hybrid that’s here to solve all the woes that come with changing seasons.

The fashion world loves its hybrid words (i.e. jegging, coatigan, jort). And for good reason — these combo trends allow us to participate in an element of two different styles with one piece (perhaps the ultimate BOGO?). In particular, the shacket, takes the stylistic construction of your go-to button-down shirt and adds the weightiness a jacket offers. This thicker, more structured overshirt is perfect for layering and made for tackling milder yet unpredictable temperatures. It also sports a cool oversized fit that works for everyone. Imagine donning a longline shacket with your favorite voluminous tiered dress and chunky loafers or throwing a leather one over your favorite matching sweatsuit set. The possibilities are endless.

We’ve done what we do best by finding the shacket diamonds in the digital rough. From quilts and fleeces to leathers and plaids, there’s a bit of something for just about everyone’s sartorial tastes. 

At Refinery29, we’re here to help you navigate this overwhelming world of stuff. All of our market picks are independently selected and curated by the editorial team. If you buy something we link to on our site, Refinery29 may earn commission.

Brushed Oversized Check Jacket


Size Range: OS
This brushed, lime-green, and white plaid shacket is perfect for brightening up any gloomy spring day.

Shop NastyGal



NastyGal I'm In a Brushed Oversized Check Jacket, $, available at NastyGal

Soft-Brushed Utility Plus-Size Shirt Jacket


Size Range: 1X-4X
This plus-size option is essentially your classic camel winter coat in shacket form. This universal hue will get lots of wear and pair with virtually any outfit.

Shop Old Navy

Old Navy Soft-Brushed Utility Plus-Size Shirt Jacket, $, available at Gap

Cozy Brushed Shirt Jacket


Size Range: XXS-XXL
Hollister brings us a cute brushed shacket in a range of pastels. The green and lavender are pictured here, but also check out the yellow!

Shop Hollister


Hollister Co. COZY BRUSHED SHIRT JACKET, $, available at Hollister Co.

Oversized Fleece Shacket In Khaki


Size Range: 16-28
ASOS has a pretty wide assortment of shackets. This muted teal has range. Throw it over your favorite outfit for walking around the park on a slightly chillier day.

Shop ASOS

ASOS DESIGN , $, available at ASOS

The Denim Chore Jacket


Size Range: XXS-L
We couldn't compile a list and leave out a denim number. The ultimate transitional fabric with the perfect shape. Everlane really hits the nail on the head with this one.

Shop Everlane


Everlane The Denim Chore Jacket, $, available at Everlane

Walton Shirt-Jacket


Size Range: XXS-XXL
This lilac shacket is dying to be layered over a buffalo check shirt and worn with black Carhart pants and Doc Oxfords.

Shop Madewell

Madewell Walton Shirt-Jacket, $, available at Madewell

Universal Thread Long Sleeve Chore Jacket


Size Range: XS-4X
Can we talk about how the chore jacket was the original shacket?

Shop Target


Universal Thread Women's Long Sleeve Chore Jacket - Universal Thread™, $, available at Target

Bobbie Plaid Shirt Jacket


Size Range: XS-3X (Petite Sizes Available)
This one has to be a favorite of this roundup! The model is killing it too, amirite? They are giving us transitional season realness. The dress, The boots, THE SHACKET!!!

Shop Anthropologie

If By Sea Bobbie Plaid Shirt Jacket, $, available at Anthropologie

Faux Suede Overshirt


Size Range: XS-XXL
Here's a clean-lined sophisticated take on the shacket — faux suede in an adaptable light khaki colorway.

Shop Zara

Zara Faux Suede Overshirt, $, available at Zara

Ruby Jacket


Size Range: XS-XL
This piece looked too good on top of this double denim, Canadian tux to pass up including in this round-up.

Shop Nordstrom

Free People Ruby Jacket, $, available at Nordstom

Faux Suede Shacket


Size Range: 16-26
This faux suede number has the most glorious-looking pockets out front. The added waist belt is ideal for endless options for dressing up this cutie shirt. To cinch or not to cinch? That is the question.

Shop Eloquii

Eloquii Faux Suede Shacket, $, available at Eloquii

King & Tuckfield Oversized Wool Tweed Coat


Size Range: XS-M
King & Tuckfield brings us this oversized gem. When buttoned up, it looks like the shirtdress of your dreams – but extra warm and cozy. The coast is covered in white and army green chevrons that definitely make it stand out.

Shop Net-A-Porter

King & Tuckfield Oversized wool-tweed coat, $, available at Net-A-Porter

Plus Size Denim Combo Jacket



Size Range: 0X-3X
This piece screams of a casual coolness that most of us dream of. It's a shacket, but also a hoodie.

Shop Forever21

Forever21 Plus Plus Size Denim Combo Jacket, $, available at Forever21

Yukata Shirt Black & Yellow


Size Range: OS
Although the price is a little on the steeper side, it's so fun and NEEDED to be shared with you all. We hope one of you snags this Japanese-inspired shacket design!

Shop Wolf & Badger

The Shirt of my Sensei Yukata Shirt Black & Yellow, $, available at wolf and badger

Women's Adirondack Barn Coat, Flannel-Lined


Size Range: XS-3X
L.L. Bean is a tried and true retailer to satisfy all the Norm-core lovers out there. This is definitely giving off outdoor explorer vibes.

Shop L.L. Bean


LL Bean Women's Adirondack Barn Coat, $, available at LL Bean

Pilcro Abigail Quilted Shirt Jacket


Size Range: XS-3X (Petite Sizes Available)
This shacket is quilted to perfection. Embrace your inner sweet elderly person with the ultimate grandmacore garment.

Shop Anthropologie


Pilcro and the Letterpress Pilcro Abigail Quilted Shirt Jacket, $, available at Anthropologie

Brushed Plaid Jacket In Baby Blue


Size Range: 12-26
There's no such thing as too many plaids. This one is a little more subdued, so it'll be a great piece for all the pattern mixers out there.

Shop ASOS

ASOS DESIGN Curve brushed plaid jacket in baby blue, $, available at ASOS

Oversized Caban Coat

Size Range: S-L
Why yes, we did peep the crazy price tag on this guy but, we'd be remiss not to include one style in this round-up from MM6 Maison Margiela. The oversized silhouette is a big part of the brand's code.

Shop MM6 Maison Margiela

MM6 Maison Margiela Oversized Caban Coat, $, available at Maison Margiela

Faux Leather Shirt Jacket


Size Range: XXS-XL
And if you absolutely can't pass up on faux leather goodness, here's a style from Abercrombie & Fitch that doesn't cost hundreds.

Shop Abercrombie & Fitch

Abercrombie and Fitch Faux Leather Shirt Jacket, $, available at Abercrombie and Fitch

Ilana Kohn Mabel Crop Jacket


Size Range: XS-L
This nightshade cropped shacket from Ilana Kohn is made from a heavy-duty twill. It'd be great for layering and topping off your favorite pair of high-waisted pants. Check out the delicious, earthy terra color as well.

Shop Garmentory

Ilana Kohn Mabel Crop Jacket, $, available at Garmentory

James Jacket


Size Range M-XL
This boxy deep olive shacket will pair well with anything from dad jeans to faux leather.

Shop Free People

Free People James Jacket, $, available at Free People

Alberto Biani Button Up Shacket


Size Range: M
This Shacket is in a classic teddy bear brown color. It'll definitely be a go-to as the tone pairs well with most colors. Imagine a monochromatic espresso themed outfit. Now, that's a vibe I can get behind.

Shop Farfetch

Alberto Biani Button Up Shacket, $, available at Farfetch

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The Cold-Shoulder Top Is Making A Comeback, Thanks To The Vaccine

We loved our cold-shoulder tops as wintertime going-out tops. Usually long-sleeved, this late-2010s-era silhouette was once the item of choice for 20-somethings who frequented 1 Oak in Manhattan’s Meatpacking District and ate at Lisa Vanderpump’s restaurants in West Hollywood, and didn’t want to also have to carry a jacket. It’s been a few years since we’ve worn them, especially now that “going out” is something more like a hypothetical concept. But, we’ve been digging our cold-shoulder tops out from the backs of our closets once again, thanks to people like Dolly Parton, who wore one to get the vaccine — the same one she helped fund. Given how easy her top made getting jabbed, we wouldn’t be surprised if the vaccine will bring about the second coming of the cold-shoulder top. 

In a video Parton posted on Twitter, captioned, “Dolly gets a dose of her own medicine,” the Grammy winner showed off her purple, cold-shoulder top and shared her excitement over getting the vaccine, saying that she’s “old enough” and “smart enough” to get it. Her tweet, which has been retweeted more than 26,000 times, caught the attention of writer Marshall Bright, who replied: “The perfect reason to wear a cold shoulder top!”

In February, Liverpool, England-based user @ohchrissavidge tweeted a screenshot of a Revolve model wearing a turtleneck, cold-shoulder sweater from Paige, with the caption, “Might order this for my vaccinations.” The post blew up, with over 450,000 likes and 58,000 retweets, and counting. In the thread below, others including Geraldine Desu admitted to wearing their own arm-baring tops to their winter appointments: “I did this to my doctor and she couldn’t stop laughing about it,” she tweeted. A vaccination site worker from Indianapolis named Jessica praised the idea: “This is a huge hit with the staff. Had one patient yesterday with a similar top. It was the perfect choice for her vaccination.”

And if you’re looking for new cold-shoulders to buy, the good news is that designers are still making them. Last week, New York-based designer Christian Siriano presented his fall ‘21 collection, which included a handful of cold-shoulder options just waiting to be worn for your impending vaccine appointment. Some even came with matching face masks.

Whether you like it or not, cold-shoulder tops are once again in our good graces — and not just because we miss going out. But if memories from the first time around remain too close for comfort, fellow New York designer Marc Jacobs has another, very Marc Jacobs solution: Just strip — but whatever you do, don’t forget your pearls

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2021 Has Already Shown Us The Power Of Grassroots Organizing — Here Are 5 Leaders To Watch

In certain parts of the country, it’s a well-worn joke that you can be longtime neighbors with someone and never know each other’s names. But in recent times, the polite distance between many of us has closed — even if, thanks to the pandemic, we’ve never been more physically far apart. We’re beginning to recognize just how important our support systems are to keeping us healthy and safe.

Counting on others applies to how we make change happen, too. We’ve witnessed the power of on-the-ground organizing in the past, but seldom with this emotional ferocity and perhaps never before in a period that has so tellingly exposed the limits of the institutions we believed we could rely on. We’ve seen what listening, coming together, and pitching in can do, and we’ve only just begun.

To accelerate and sustain positive social change across America, the Gucci Changemakers program provides donations to community-based organizations in 11 U.S. cities, three of which we’ve recognized here. Ahead, meet the leaders of these groups — pictured wearing GUCCI VS. EVERYBODY, a collaboration with designer and Changemaker Tommey Walker of DETROIT VS. EVERYBODY — and find out how their work has directly improved the lives of an expanding circle of families, friends, colleagues, and beyond. Because when one person acts as a change-maker, it sets off a chain reaction; and when we empower those around us, all of us rise.

For many at Custom Collaborative, a New York City-based nonprofit that helps women from low-income and immigrant communities launch careers in fashion, lockdown has meant learning a new skill set digitally for 30 hours a week with other program participants spread across more than 20 countries. And yet, according to executive director Ngozi Okaro, even amidst the cultural differences and so much pandemic-related loss, program participants have also found it within themselves to make and donate masks, find their classmates housing, and offer guidance to one another with honesty and generosity.

“The stories they share are so much more meaningful than anything I could say because it’s peer-to-peer,” Okaro says. “In one of our Tuesday makers’ meetings, someone said, ‘I want to be rich’ and then quickly followed up with, ‘And I want all of us to be rich. I want all my soul sisters to be rich.’ It’s this collective spirit that excites me and makes me feel like there’s not one person who makes this thing go. It’s everybody’s collective energy that’s creating opportunity for the rest of us.”

“When I came [to Custom Collaborative], I was making clothes for my church members, and they were paying me peanuts. I didn’t know I was being used. Custom Collaborative helped me learn to charge what my time is worth. It was something Ngozi and the group were always, always telling me, like, ‘No, you don’t have to be scared [of raising your prices]. You made this clothing with love, time, and your sweat.’ She’s inspired me to create a Custom Collaborative in Nigeria. I think about what she’s done and what I can take back home because she has inspired me to be a better person.”


Ifunanya Onyekwere
Custom Collaborative graduate and owner of Aifys Clothing

On her end, Okaro has set up an organization that’s agile and “trusted in the community, because we’ve built ourselves from the ground up with their input.” This means surveying the population and moving quickly to respond to needs like food insecurity, a model Okaro says she would like to eventually scale to as many as 10 cities domestically. Her plan for the near future also includes establishing a flagship in Manhattan’s Garment District to act as an all-in-one learning center (complete with drop-in childcare) and a hub for small and emerging designers, but Okaro says she’s ultimately building with the intention of one day rendering her own creation obsolete.

“The final iteration of Custom Collaborative would be when the industry has transformed in a way that pays people fairly, doesn’t pollute the earth, and provides people with clothes that make them feel good about themselves. And so when we’ve done all that, I’ll check off the box that we can close Custom Collaborative.”

“Custom Collaborative has been my angel. When I started learning, my husband was infected with COVID. He was in the hospital for eight months. Custom Collaborative was the first responder for me. They gave me a lot of support and established a balance in my life during such a hard time.”


Isabel Espinoza
Custom Collaborative graduate

Detroit’s Cass Tech is the largest high school in the city, with 2,479 students, a 99% percent graduation rate, celebrity alumni, and a 100-year legacy that Lisa Phillips, its principal of 11 years, says she refuses to rest on.

Instead, Phillips has made pivotal changes, like implementing a med-school-track program that has ninth graders shadowing surgeons in the operating theater and a philanthropy-driven curriculum that saw students driving in a caravan to deliver water to Flint. But beyond ensuring that her students are exposed to different career paths (while caring for others along the way), Phillips has introduced a culture of radical openness in an educational structure that has traditionally flowed only from the top down. In these halls, impact moves in all directions.

“Principal Phillips approaches her work as a mother,” says senior Lamont Satchel, Jr. “It’s not all pomp and pageantry; it’s ‘If you need to talk, let’s go.’ It’s that ability to be fluid with your title so every person from student to faculty to custodian can confide in her.”

“Mrs. Phillips and I have been tag-teaming since 1998. When I came to Cass, I remember her saying, ‘When you get in there, throw down.’ Those were her exact words. I’m like her mini-me. She’s impacted the type of counselor I am, and I consider her a role model and mentor.”


Monica Jones
Cass Tech counselor

Satchel, whom Phillips in turn calls “a voice of resolve,” knows this firsthand. As a student leader who often acts as a bridge between the adults and students at Cass, he’s a member of Phillips’ Focus Group initiative, in which representatives from each class bring an on-going issue to an open forum attended by faculty and students. In one recent meeting, the representatives ended up shifting Phillips’ attention from test scores to her high-schoolers’ mental wellbeing — and strengthened her conviction to always hear them out.

“You can’t say, ‘Let’s listen to the young people, but we make our own decisions,'” Phillips says. “They have to play a major role in our community. In a lot of decisions that are made on a local or national level, they’ll have maybe one kid to represent all of them — no, it has to be systemic.”

By practicing direct communication and encouraging her students to use their voices to uplift others, Phillips is helping to raise a generation of dreamers and doers like Satchel Jr. 

“My biggest takeaway from working with Lamont [Satchel Jr.] is we need to show up for one another. We need a diverse coalition of seats at the table. Whatever he’s working on, Lamont does a good job of making sure he understands the perspectives of different people.”


Mohammad Muntakim
Cass Tech senior

“When we talk about social impact, we talk about accountability,” Satchel Jr. says. “But I think the first thing is understanding the meaning of community. It extends beyond a ZIP code or the color of your skin. In my activism, what keeps us moving is hope. We’re being the change-makers. So knowing that there are people out there with hope, courage, and love inspires me and Principal Phillips. So listen and invest in us. That won’t just make life better for my generation — it’ll make life better for all.”

What many of us will remember about the summer of 2020 is the vital pull that kept calling us back to march, night after tense night. But now that those same streets ring less loudly with cries for racial equality, we might find ourselves wondering: Even when so much else demands our attention — even when so much else has happened in the meantime — how do you maintain momentum?

For Alanah Odoms, executive director of the ACLU of Louisiana in New Orleans, the fight to end mass incarceration, educate voters, protect reproductive freedom, and above all, defend “the right to live and breathe without being targeted” is powered by the people — including those whose experiences don’t make headlines.

“What we’re doing is hearing the stories of brutality and abuse, filing cases, and creating a repository of community narratives, not just in Louisiana but across the country,” Odom says of Justice Lab, the ACLU’s police accountability project. “To address many of these issues, the first thing I did when I came to the ACLU was sit down with members of the activist community and think about how we take grassroots activism and bring that power to the statehouse and the courts.”

But what can the average person do to propel these causes forward? The answer, according to development director Maggy Baccinelli, lies with listening, “building your foundation of understanding” by reading and studying, and advancing — through volunteering and donating — the work of “Black and Brown people who know firsthand the perils of structural racism and are uniquely qualified to address it.”

Only through allyship and widespread cooperation can we remake the world — one in which everyone is treated with dignity and fairness. To Baccinelli, getting there looks like inventing a “first-of-its-kind model for connecting supporters and major donors to the reparations movement.” And for Odoms, it’s “a dramatic and radical re-imagination of our criminal-legal system” as a means to “get to the heart of a lot of other, more pressing social issues of our time involving race.” But none of this will be possible unless we put our malaise aside and keep going.

“I can relate to feeling like the problems are insurmountable,” Odoms says. “But the moment we’re in is only matched in significance by the civil rights movement in the 1960s and Reconstruction. So history has its eyes on us right now. I really do believe that each of us have a power to contribute to this greater movement for equality and freedom. We don’t have to have formalized degrees to do it. We don’t have to be bona fide community activists. But we do have to use our spheres of influence as best we can to catalyze change.”

“With Alanah and Maggy allowing me to do a virtual Town Hall meeting through Justice Lab, the story got out. We heard from people from all over the world, people I never thought would hear the story. Because we’re in Lafayette, the story wasn’t as big as Breonna Taylor or George Floyd. To have people out there fighting for families like mine…I never thought I’d be in that position. It makes me know that no matter what happens, it will be okay. They say sometimes justice doesn’t come in the form we want it to, but just to know that we have [people like Alanah and Maggy] out there is big for me.

I have two people I’m talking to who’ve lost their sons in different ways, but we’ve been getting together like family now. We consider one another sisters. Helping others gives me the strength to move on. Because I never want to see another family go through what I’m going through.”


Michelle Pellerin
mother of Trayford Pellerin, whom Lafayette, LA police shot 10 times in the back and killed on August 21, 2020

VS EVERYBODY and DETROIT VS EVERYBODY are registered trademarks of Detroit vs Everybody LLC.

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These Hanging Planters Will Actually Breathe Life Into Your Home

We’re always looking for low-investment ways to upgrade our home decor — but how many throw pillows and succulents can an amateur decorator possibly go through until running out of easy options? Enter the hanging planter: a decorative pot that can be suspended from your ceiling or wall as an unexpected way to elevate everything from herbs to small flowers, plants, and even your favorite fruit.

There’s an array of unique hanging planter options out there for any type of home aesthetic: minimalistic copper looks to complement more contemporary spaces or colorful glass-blown iterations for the more experimental styles. Hey, you can even DIY your own dangling plant home from an old gift basket or particularly attractive takeout container.

No worries if you're not up to the task of making one yourself, because we've put together a range of our favorite hanging planters ahead — featuring everything from macrame details to galvanized steel. Now all you need to do is simply add one to cart and get ready to pot your favorite green friend inside of it.

At Refinery29, we’re here to help you navigate this overwhelming world of stuff. All of our market picks are independently selected and curated by the editorial team. If you buy something we link to on our site, Refinery29 may earn commission.

Urban Outfitters Malia Hanging Planter


One way to cheer up your WFH space? Re-pot your favorite green friend inside a happy daisy hanging planter.

Urban Outfitters Malia Hanging Planter, $, available at Urban Outfitters

Anthropologie Iris Rainbow Two-Tier Hanging Planter


If this sweet little rainbow duo doesn't brighten up a dark corner of your space, we're not sure what will.

Anthropologie Iris Rainbow Two-Tier Hanging Planter, $, available at Anthropologie

Amazon Macrame Hanging Planter Shelf


Instead of repotting your favorite green friends, you can elevate them to new sunlight-reaching heights with this boho-chic macrame hanging shelf instead.

TIMEYARD Macrame Hanging Planter Shelf, $, available at Amazon

Crazy Plant Bae Macrame Planter


This under-$20 option should satisfy all of your classic macrame planter needs.

Crazy Plant Bae Macrame Planter, $, available at Crazy Plant Bae

Etsy Ceramic Splatter Hanging Planter


The hand-painted splatter on this ceramic pot makes for a subtle yet chic decorative accent in any room.

HelloMariluStudio Hand-painted Ceramic Splatter Round Hanging Planter, $, available at Etsy

Viva Terra Hanging Clay Pots


Why settle for one planter bowl when you can have nine? This hanging-clay-pot unit is making our living-wall dreams an under $100 reality.

Viva Terra Hanging Clay Pots, Set of 9, $, available at Viva Terra

Urban Outfitters Beaded Hanging Planter


Upgrade your living space with a sweet hanging pot crafted from wooden beads that will easily complement a variety of interiors.

Urban Outfitters Beaded Hanging Planter, $, available at Urban Outfitters

Mkono Geometric Metal Plant Hanger Set


If you’ve got a green thumb and a contemporary sense of style, this black planter duo is for you. Its modern geometric shape sets it apart from other hanging planters, while the metal material has an industrial appeal.

Mkono Geometric Metal Plant Hanger Set, $, available at Amazon

World Market Half-Circle Hanging Planter

If you want a vessel that promises to stand out, consider this sculptural, half-circle planter crafted from glazed earthenware.

Cost Plus World Market Ivory And Tan Half Circle Modern Hanging Planter, $, available at Cost Plus World Market

Mkono Ceramic Hanging Planter Trio


This sweet trio of ceramic planters hanging from simple jute ropes is ready to brighten up a kitchen to living room or bedside corner.

Mkono Ceramic Hanging Planter, Set of 3, $, available at Amazon

Etsy Hanging Ema Planter


Showcase your greenery in the cutest way possible — aka with this playfully-shaped, speckled-stoneware planter friend. Her name is Ema.

CeramicSense Hanging Planter Ema, $, available at Etsy

Terrain Sphere Hanging Basket


This hanging plant sphere crafted from hand-forged steel will make an understated statement inside minimalist-chic or industrial-style spaces.

Terrain Sphere Hanging Basket, $, available at Terrain

Closed Mondays Hanging Planter


Crafted from cotton rope and accented with handpainted design, these coiled hanging planters will add a vibrant elevated statement inside any space.

Closed Mondays Hanging Planter, Small, Blue, $, available at West Elm

Capra Designs Terrazzo Hanging Pot


This pretty planter is artfully crafted from a rich blue, terrazzo-speckled resin that's suspended by a tan-leather strap.

Capra Designs Terrazzo Hanging Planter, $, available at Bando

Timeyard Macrame Plant Hanger Set


Arrange this four-pack of intricately woven macrame hangers together or scattered apart inside your space as boho-chic resting places for your favorite green potted friends.

TIMEYARD Macrame Plant Hanger Set, $, available at Amazon

Umbra Bolo Hanging Planter


Let the crisp white sheen of this stoneware, cotton, and iron crafted planter instantly brighten any nook and cranny inside your space.

Umbra Umbra Bolo Hanging Planter, $, available at Amazon

Mkono Ceramic Hanging Planter


This Amazon’s choice ceramic and macrame hanger is a cute holder for everything from succulents and cacti to herbs and ferns. Plus, it’s easy to hang.

Mkono Macrame Plant Holder, $, available at Amazon

Urban Outfitters Margot Hanging Planter


Upgrade your living space with a hanging pot crafted from a mix of woven rattan materials, corded bindings, and wooden rings that will easily complement a variety of interiors.

Urban Outfitters Margot Hanging Planter, $, available at Urban Outfitters

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आंखों में काजल लगाए, मलाइका अरोड़ा ने फिर फ्लॉन्ट की कर्वी बॉडी और कूल स्टाइल March 03, 2021 at 02:08AM

​मलाइका अरोड़ा चाहे जो पहन लें, सभी में उनका हुस्न देखने लायक होता है। इस बार भी इस बाला को जॉगर्स से लेकर शॉर्ट्स और जींस-टॉप तक में देखा गया और सभी में वह कमाल की ही लग रही थीं।