Guns and corsets: Firearms industry
strikes gold marketing to women
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[January 25, 2019]
By Daniel Trotta
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - Entrepreneur and
fashion designer Anna Taylor is trying to bring back the corset -- not
to revive Victorian lingerie but to give women a place to carry their
handguns.
"I don't know that the corset's ever been out of fashion, but it's never
been so useful," Taylor said in Las Vegas at this year's SHOT Show, the
largest trade show for the firearms industry.
After overlooking the women's market for years, the firearms industry
now sees women as the drivers of growth. Gun sales have declined since
peaking in 2016, with companies like Remington Outdoor Company Inc going
through bankruptcy reorganization last year, but the women's share of
the market has been growing.
Women have led the change, both as consumers and as entrepreneurs in the
world of accessories, forcing gun-makers to follow their lead.
Retailers estimate women accounted for 23 percent of the $44 billion
retail market for firearms and accessories in 2016, up 7 percentage
points from 2010, according to data from the National Shooting Sports
Foundation, which runs the Shooting, Hunting and Outdoor Trade (SHOT)
Show.
U.S. firearms sales peaked at 15.7 million in 2016, according to NSSF
data. Sales fell to 14 million in 2017 and are on pace to dip again in
2018. The trend reflects politics, with sales driven by fears that a
Democratic president will limit gun rights.
CORSETS AND YOGA PANTS
Taylor created her own company, Dene Adams, in 2013 upon growing
frustrated over the lack of holsters for women.
She sewed a neoprene mouse pad into one of her corsets for her first
prototype, and now has a lineup of 13 holsters for Dene Adams. Sales
reached $250,000 in 2014 and grew to $1 million in 2018, she said.
Among the hot items this year are yoga pants with enough support in the
waistband to carry the weight of a gun. Taylor also pulled up the hem of
her skirt, showing off her compression shorts with a built-in thigh
holster that allows a woman to pack a piece whether she is dressed for a
night on the town or Monday morning at the office.
Men's holsters have traditionally been designed around the belt, but
because women wear a variety of outfits they need options in the bra,
waist, belly, underarm, thigh, ankle and purse. That also means women
need to practice their draw from multiple angles.
Firearms companies once engaged in what is derisively called "pink it
and shrink it," offering traditional guns in feminine colors and
promoting smaller guns to fit a woman's hand, which is not necessarily a
solution as lighter guns have more recoil.
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Anna Taylor, founder and CEO of Dene Adams, displays a
concealed-carry holster for women at the SHOT (Shooting, Hunting,
Outdoor Trade) Show in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S., January 22, 2019.
REUTERS/Steve Marcus
Carrie Lightfoot created the Well-Armed Woman in 2012 to give women
easier access to information and products and now has 400 chapters
across the United States.
Lightfoot said gun makers such as Glock Inc, Sturm Ruger & Company
Inc and Walther have since developed more sophisticated products and
design changes.
Paul Spitale, a senior vice president at Colt's Manufacturing
Company, said the company made famous by the .45-caliber handgun
offers a wider range of 9-millimeter options, in part because the 9
mm is by far the most popular choice for women.
The female dollar has also affected the traditionally macho culture
of guns and hunting. Major gun and ammunition makers now sponsor
female competitive shooters.
SHOT Shows used to feature gun-toting models in high heels and
push-up bras but exhibition booths now are staffed by knowledgeable
women dressed in polo shirts and tactical gear.
"When I walked into my first SHOT Show in 2009, I was stunned" at
what she called the "booth babes," said Claudia Chisholm, owner of
Gun Tote'n Mamas, a company that makes purses for carrying handguns.
"It hasn't caught up yet with the rest of society, but it's a lot
better. Thank God."
Sales of her handbags, designed to enable women to draw within two
seconds, have grown 1,000 percent in the past five years, Chisholm
said.
While the U.S. gun rights debate rages, women see their weapons as
empowering. At a time when the #MeToo movement has raised awareness
of sexual assault, firearms are "the great equalizer," said Dianna
Muller, a retired police officer from Tulsa, Oklahoma, who is now a
full-time professional shooter.
"Growing up, my generation of women have been told we can do
anything that we want," she said.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Dina Kyriakidou and Lisa
Shumaker)
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