Marketing World
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Vol. XXI, No. 21
Friday-Saturday, August 24-25, 2007 | MANILA, PHILIPPINES
Marketing World
BY PAOLA MESSANA, AFP
Pet Fashion Week offers style tips for pampered pooches
New York — For
discriminating pets, it really
was the cat’s pajamas: New
York’s second annual Pet
Fashion Week offered
everything a pampered pooch
could ever want, from
jewel-encrusted leashes to
doggy perfume.
Among the canine clients at the event on Sunday was Chai, a short-haired
white American Bulldog with blue eyes, dressed in a pink and bronze satin cape
made especially for the weekend event.

Models show off dogs in designer outfits during the 2007 Pet Fashion Week in New York. The first fashion week devoted to pets was held last year.
"We closed our pet shop in Baltimore for three days to come here. The
dress was made for her, for the event," explained Thomas Berger, Chai’s owner.
Nearby, a male model strutting in just his underpants lead a honey-colored
Greyhound dressed in a camouflage outfit up the catwalk.
The show lasted a good hour, featuring dogs modeling designs from 20 or so
pet fashion houses to a pounding disco soundtrack.
Although it was mostly dogs on show, a black cat in a golden collar did
make an appearance on the runway towards the end, carried by a young girl.
On the fifth floor of the Manhattan exhibition center, the energy was at
fever pitch. A Chihuahua dressed as a Balinese dancer with a golden tiara and
accompanied by a woman in the same outfit drew particularly rapturous applause.
The first and fourth floors were devoted to exhibitors, where everything
imaginable was on offer: bags, vitamins, leashes and special pet furniture.
"It’s fantastic, much more than we expected," said Rie Nishimura, a
Japanese buyer from Pet-a-Porter Life, Inc., visiting especially from Tokyo.
After watching the show, she put in her orders to be delivered to Japan.
"We bought hundreds of things for dogs, and accessories. It’s a huge
industry, and Americans are the leaders," she said.

Coiffed canine
At her feet, Oliver, a two-year-old Shih Tzu in a brand-named sweat shirt
was asleep on a special pink satin sofa with tassel features.
Stacy Braverman, owner of Web site Bitch New York, a luxury online pet
store, had brought her four Chihuahuas, one of whom seemed to have had enough.
"Lola just fell asleep, she was so stressed by the show," said Ms.
Braverman. "We try to specialize in very unique and upscale items, spa products,
a brand new line of shampoos and conditioners," she said.
"She is wearing ’pink sugar souffle,’ do you like it?" she asked.
"I had to buy a love seat so they [could] be with me while I work. Their
names are Lola, Havana, Winston and Beckham. Yes, like the football player," she
said.
A passing spectator with a Pomeranian in a kilt shot back: "Oh you have a
Beckham? My Pomeranian is called Jagger! Yes, like Mick!"
On Ms. Braverman’s Web site, wealthy buyers can find diamond-studded
collars at around 3,000 dollars. She had already sold more than one, she said,
as a Poodle in green suede performed a waltz on the catwalk.
According to the American Pet Product Manufacturers Association, 63
percent of American households have a pet — amounting to some 88 million cats,
74 million dogs and 142 million gold fish.
The pet industry is worth around $40 billion a year, including $16 billion
a year in pet food, $20 billion in veterinarian bills and medicine, and almost
$four billion in toys, clothes and dog-sitters.
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