Endless Lines, Baffling Delays, Crocs for Days
Travelers want to be comfortable and practical but
overly casual dressing at the airport might not be the ticket.
By Guy
Trebay
Aug. 3,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/03/style/endless-lines-baffling-delays-crocs-for-days.html
Flying home
from Paris recently, I suddenly had the creepy sensation of something hovering
over my shoulder. Looking toward the aisle I spied nothing. Swiveling my head
to the left, I saw what it was. The woman in the row behind me had somehow
wedged her toes into the seat crevice alongside my ear.
The eye has
to travel, as the famous Diana Vreeland epigram had it, and logically where the
eye goes, the body follows. The question one would put to fellow travelers is
this: Would it really be too much to ask you to wear shoes?
Travelers,
as we are constantly being reminded, are returning to the skies in droves, a
welcome release from those pandemic years we spent peering through the prison
bars of Zoom and dreaming of far-off destinations — or any place that wasn’t a
bedroom passing itself off as an office cubicle.
Is it
possible, though, that all the time spent trapped in our skivvies accelerated
what was already a concerning breakdown of distinctions between what
constitutes public space and private? Sure, it has been a while since fuzzy
slippers were normalized as streetwear and pajama bottoms became cool for the
mall.
Yet somehow
along the way the traditional sense that embarking on a journey is both a
privilege and a potentially special event got mislaid. Nowadays the arrivals
and departure halls at major airports look little different from a locker room.
“Airline
travel used to be glamorous,” said Valerie Steele, the director of the museum
at the Fashion Institute of Technology, referring to a putatively more
civilized era than our own, when women wore a hat and gloves to fly and men
spiffed up in coat and tie. Now, of course, air travel has devolved into a
pitched struggle for extra legroom, overhead compartment space, early boarding
privileges or a packet of salted snacks.
Even before
experts like Peter Kern, the chief executive officer of the Expedia Group,
predicted at the Bloomberg Technology Summit in San Francisco that this summer
would be “the busiest travel season ever,” many had resigned themselves to air
travel robbed of its former luster, to the sense that airlines see passengers
as little more than human-shaped bundles of luggage. (Never mind that inflation
and high gas prices have made the tariffs for a flight across country feel as
pricey as a six-month cruise. )
Still,
while the experience of travel may seem demeaning — hourslong lines for
check-in, security and baggage at facilities like Delta’s Terminal 4 at Kennedy
International Airport, a bare-bones cavern where the sole place to sit is on
the floor — is that a good reason to meet insult with insult and dress
accordingly? As someone once doomed to spend a night in the Minneapolis
airport, I can attest that denim is a more practical option than PJ’s when you
are bedded down behind a flight information board.
Still,
practicality has its limits. Take the young woman recently spotted rolling a
chunky purple suitcase through Terminal 3 at Los Angeles Airport. Though her
bag tags gave every indication she’d recently arrived from elsewhere, her
wardrobe suggested otherwise.
Yes, her
grooming was immaculate, right down to the pearlescent French manicure with its
coffin tips. What threw off at least one confounded observer, though, was her
choice to take to the skies in a belted velour bathrobe and a pair of rubber
shower shoes.
“There’s
this need for comfort in all kinds of settings,” said Josh Peskowitz, a men’s
wear designer and pundit. “I’m not saying we should go back to ‘jacket
required,’ but I’m still not ready for people in straight-up Mark
Zuckerberg-style pajama pants boarding a plane.”
Blame the
athleisure trend and those who foisted it on an unready public, said Heather
Shimokawa, a brand consultant and former vice president for fashion direction
at Bloomingdale’s. It was fashion editors and stylists who first promoted this
now ubiquitous hybrid of sportswear and intimate apparel but then left
unwitting consumers to interpret the results for themselves.
“There is a
lot of space for an editorial vision of what comfort dressing actually means,” Ms.
Shimokawa said. “Casual does not mean slovenly. Your comfort should not equate
with my gross-out.”
The issue,
by no means limited to travel, arises in part when strangers wear stuff that
forces us into a visual relationship with body parts we’d rather not think
about. “If you say anything, you quickly run into a very aggressively enforced
form of body positivity,” Ms. Steele said. “It becomes a matter of rights. It
is my absolute right to wear whatever I want, and you have no right whatsoever
to tell me what is appropriate.”
And yet why
not? Perhaps, said Bonnie Morrison, a fashion brand consultant in New York, it
is because the social contract “has been shredded.”
Some of it
is a pushback on manners and etiquette “used as tools of oppression, Ms. Morrison
added. “Yet, as the daughter of a man born under Jim Crow who saw manners as an
expression of self-respect, I also look at propriety and etiquette as a way to
show the respect for others you hope that they’ll return.”
Is it
inherently disrespectful to board a crowded aluminum tube in which one will be
confined for hours wearing comfortable shorts, leggings or sweats? Plainly,
many think not. What, then, about open-toe shoes or sandals or Crocs?
“I draw the
line at bare feet,” said Pelayo Diaz, a fashionable Spanish digital strategist
with a million Instagram followers. “Dress nicely, if not for yourself then for
the rest of us,” Mr. Diaz wrote in a direct message. “At the very least wear
socks. After all, we’re the ones that have to look at you.”
What
presents little more than a transitory nuisance for most can amount to an
occupational hazard for airborne professionals. While most airlines have dress
guidelines, these vary between carriers and are well nigh unenforceable during
peak travel periods.
“I do the
boarding door, and we have people who come on barefoot,” a Delta flight
attendant said last week at J.F.K. “I’m sure they have shoes somewhere.” (The
flight attendant declined to give her name, citing corporate policy that
requires employees to seek permission to speak to reporters.)
As if to
prove her point, the terminal was jampacked with ill-shod travelers whose
overall garb suggested they were headed out for a beach day or to Everest base
camp. True, there were a few travelers spotted over the course of a long
afternoon attired in long pants, buttoned shirts and even blazers. Some wore
formal suits and hats. Those in button-downs, as it happened, were Italian; the
suited, observant Orthodox Jewish men.
“Africans
dress up for travel, and Europeans,” said the flight attendant, who sometimes
greets passengers in French. “They always ask, ‘How did you know?’ And I say,
‘Because you’re well dressed.’”
Forgoing a
sports jacket or an easy summer shift in favor of jammies is misguided, the
designer Billy Reid said recently, from his home in Florence, Ala. Why treat
travel as a chore when you can use dress to celebrate an experience only a
small fraction of the overall population is privileged to enjoy?
There is
another thing to consider when deciding whether to shine up for the road, Mr.
Reid said.
“I always
remind my college-age children that the stranger you encounter on a flight may
just be your future boss.”
A version
of this article appears in print on Aug. 4, 2022, Section D, Page 5 of the New
York edition with the headline: Endless Lines, Baffling Delays, Crocs for Days.
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