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You are at:Home » Has fast fashion won? At Shein’s Toronto pop-up, it sure looked that way | Canada Voices
Has fast fashion won? At Shein’s Toronto pop-up, it sure looked that way | Canada Voices
Lifestyle

Has fast fashion won? At Shein’s Toronto pop-up, it sure looked that way | Canada Voices

2 June 20266 Mins Read

Open this photo in gallery:

A woman looks inside the SHEIN pop-up in Toronto on Thursday. On the first day, customers lined up for more than an hour to get in.Laura Proctor/The Globe and Mail

On a sunny Thursday morning in May, global fast-fashion brand Shein kicked off its four-day Toronto pop-up at Zara’s former two-storey Queen West location. By the time I arrived, just before noon, the line was roughly 200-people deep and showed no signs of waning.

As I ogled the scene from across the street, a burly biker sidled up to me and asked if all the fuss was for Justin Bieber. Sadly not, I informed him, but I understood his thinking. In Toronto, a line that long usually means a sneaker drop, viral food item or Drake-related shenanigans. Aside from Brandy Melville’s one-size reign down the block, it’s rare to see this kind of turnout for polyester.

The pop-up comes at a loaded moment for the brand. Shein recently acquired Everlane, the eco-conscious retailer once synonymous with ethical basics and “radical transparency”, in a deal reportedly worth about US$100-million. The buyout was driven in part by Everlane’s mounting debt, but it also gives Shein something it has long struggled to buy outright: credibility.

Is the fashion haul dead?

As the company looks to move further upmarket, soften its reputation and position itself ahead of a potential U.S. IPO, taking over one of sustainable fashion’s biggest names underlines just how thoroughly the fast-fashion model is reshaping the industry.

But that’s not something many of the brand’s customers are worried about or even aware of, I learned. The young women I spoke to had made an event out of the launch, with some commuting for more than 90 minutes for the event. Joyful and fresh-faced, they were just happy to be there and hopefully score a few summer finds.

Open this photo in gallery:

A customer waves her receipt and dances out of the pop-up.Laura Proctor/The Globe and Mail

I chatted with a few shoppers in their 20s, who told me they frequently shop Shein online so it only made sense to check it out in person. They had all been waiting in line for an hour, having made the trip from Mississauga, Brampton and Etobicoke. When I asked how they feel about Shein’s quality, the group agreed it depends on the item, and they always check reviews first. One draw they all agreed on: the low prices, which allow them to find “dupes” of designer brands and wear different outfits every day.

The pop-up was a veritable summer fantasyland, where a shopper could buy lashes for $6, nail art for $2 and a bikini for less than lunch. The most expensive items may have been the beach bags, which hovered around $45. Although the clothing racks were busy, the fitting rooms weren’t, as if customers were so used to clicking “purchase” that an in-person try-on felt unnecessary.

Racks, like Pinterest boards come to life, were labelled with micro-trends such as “Meadow Girl,” “Tropic Girly Pop,” “Whimsical Garden,” “Euro Girl Summer,” “Coastal Chic” and “Sunset Siren.” Everything seemed to come in pink and butter-yellow, and in endless supply were beach sets, crop tops and accessories no one needs (tissue box covers, knick-knack organizers), but gosh, wouldn’t they be nice to have?

The fabric of community: Textile stores are thriving as hubs for connection and sustainability

The crowd mirrored the merchandise: groups of young women in athleisure, Trader Joe’s totes in hand, fruity body mist in the air. Families browsed, boyfriends dutifully held shopping bags. Unsurprisingly, the majority of Shein’s customers are women. However, one small corner of the store was reserved for menswear (a massive hit, a Shein spokesperson told me), while other areas were dedicated to plus-size folks, kids and pets.

One of the pop-up’s two escalators had been converted into a slide that landed in a ball pit, so kids could play while their parents shopped. Upstairs, there was a branded photo-op zone (a smart move, as many of the customers I spoke with said they’d heard about the opening on TikTok and were eager to share their purchases online). Item tags prompted buyers to download the Shein app and scan for “Shein trends,” or popular items in stock – a reminder that the store is really just a temporary portal back to the online platform, the brand’s bread and butter.

Frankly, it was impressive how the company brought the social media experience to life, letting its Gen Z shoppers know that it is still very much digital-first.

It would be easy to be cynical about all of this – the brand has long been criticized for the environmental and labour concerns that trail ultra-fast-fashion, and the Everlane deal feels like a surrender for sustainability.

But the line outside the pop-up complicates the moral neatness of that story. The shoppers I spoke to were not confused about the brand’s appeal; they love Shein because it’s cheap. Many wanted the pop-up to become permanent. A Shein spokesperson shared that more than 2,000 customers dropped by on Day 1 alone, making a strong case for physical stores. In a city where rent, groceries and the occasional iced coffee can make a person feel personally victimized by the economy, a $6 bikini is perhaps not just a fashion choice, but a financial argument.

Open this photo in gallery:

A young woman shows a cherry purse charm that she purchased online from SHEIN, while waiting in line to enter the pop-up.Laura Proctor/The Globe and Mail

That outlook may not absolve the company, and it certainly throws any concept of conscious consumerism in the trash, but it does explain the crowd. For years, consumers were told that values could be expressed through shopping: Buy better, buy less, invest in quality, vote with your wallet. But when the cost of living rises faster than wages, “ethical consumption” becomes a privileged choice. Everlane’s promise was always aspirational: better basics, better processes. Shein’s promise is simpler: more stuff, more often, for less money.

It’s no surprise, then, that many of the women in line resembled one another, down to the shape of their sunglasses and the wash of their jeans. It takes time and experience to build personal style and, certainly, taste. When I informed shoppers that Winners, a store where they could find affordable designer pieces, was just down the street, I was met with scoffs.

That may be the biggest takeaway. Shein’s victory is not just that people want affordable clothes. It’s that the company has mastered a new brand of consumerism, hinged on the low-stakes fantasy of becoming someone else for $12 and the feeling that style is accessible when so much else in the world isn’t.

But for this thirtysomething, watching these young women leave with their branded shopping bags felt like a referendum on sustainability as a selling point: Can consumers be expected to make ethical choices inside an economic system that makes the easiest options cheaper, shinier and more fun.

Fast fashion may not have won because everyone stopped caring but because caring got expensive. And at Shein’s Toronto pop-up, the checkout line suggested that plenty of people had done the math.

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