A&F was once known for its sophisticated racy marketing photography by
Bruce Weber. It was
black and white and set outdoors, usually with partially nude males and females for an increased tone of sexuality. The company promotes its casting sessions, models, and photo shoots in the "A&F Casting" feature on its website. The website also provides a gallery of current photography. Framed copies at company stores will sometimes name the model and store. The company's
brand image is heavily promoted as an international casual luxury
lifestyle concept. The company began cultivating a far more upscale image after the 2005 opening of its Fifth Avenue flagship store alongside
Prada and other upscale retailers. Having for years used high-grade materials in the manufacture of its merchandise, and pricing them at "near-luxury" levels, the company introduced the trademark
Casual Luxury as a fictional dictionary term with multiple definitions such as "[using] the finest
cashmere,
pima cotton, and highest quality leather to create the ultimate in casual, body conscious clothing," and "implementing and/or incorporating time honored machinery ...to produce the most exclusive denim..." Following a lighter earnings announcement in August 2014, A&F shifted its business strategy a degree to trendier styles and faster production processes, effectively embracing fast fashion while retaining its upmarket prestige in contrast to its competitors. In 2018, Abercrombie successfully shifted its target market to an older demographic to include not just younger adults but older adults as well. In 2026, Abercrombie partnered with the
National Football League as the first official fashion partner.
Store staff The company is noted for its use of "brand representatives" (aka "models") as in-store customer service staff. An "Impact Team" was created in 2004 to control merchandise within each store and strictly maintain and enforce company standards. Bigger and higher volume stores have a "Full Time Stock" who trains Impact associates, processes shipments, maintains stock room standards, and can even act as a manager if the store is short on management staff. Stores' general manager and assistant managers are responsible for forms, lighting, photo marketing, fragrance presentations, and ensuring brand reps comply with the company's "look policy".
Products ''
Women's Wear Daily'' calls the company's clothing classically "neo-preppy", with an "edgy tone and imagery". The company's fashions have a reputation for luxury, with the majority of designs trend-driven. There is heavy promotion of "Premium Jeans". In early 2010, the company introduced a leather handbag collection inspired by designs from
Ruehl. Its prices are recognized as the highest in the youth-clothing industry. Internationally, prices are almost double those in American stores. Retail analyst Chris Boring warns that the company's brands are a "little more susceptible" should recession hit, because their specialties are premium-priced goods rather than necessities. Indeed, as the
late-2000s recession continued, the company took a hit financially for its refusal to lower prices or offer discounts. It argued that doing so would "cheapen" its near-luxury image. Analyst Bruce Watson warned that the company risked finding itself transformed into "a cautionary tale of a store that was left by the wayside when it declined to change with the times". The company has carried men's fragrances
Fierce,
Colden, and has re-branded the original cologne Woods (Christmas Floorset 2010). Women's fragrances have included
8,
Perfume 41,
Wakely, and
Perfume #1. Fierce and 8 are the most heavily marketed fragrances, as they are the signature scents of the brand overall.
Product criticism In 2002, the company sold a shirt featuring the slogan "Wong Brothers Laundry ServiceTwo Wongs Can Make It White," with smiling figures in
conical Asian hats, an offensive depiction of 19th century
Chinese immigrants to the U.S. A&F discontinued the designs and apologized after a boycott started by a
Stanford University Asian American student group. That same year, Abercrombie Kids removed a line of
thong underwear sold for girls in pre-teen children's sizes after parents mounted nationwide storefront protests. The underwear included phrases like "Eye Candy" and "Wink Wink" printed on the front. More T-shirt controversies occurred in 2004. The first incident involved a shirt featuring the phrase, "It's All Relative in West Virginia," playing on the trope that
incestuous relationships are supposedly common in rural America.
West Virginia Governor Bob Wise spoke out against the company for depicting "an unfounded, negative
stereotype of West Virginia", but A&F did not remove the shirts. Later, another T-shirt that read "L is for Loser" next to a picture of a male gymnast (implying that male participation in female-dominated sporting activities makes such males less "masculine") gathered publicity. A&F stopped selling the shirt in October 2004 after
USA Gymnastics president Bob Colarossi announced a boycott for mocking the sport. In 2005, the
Women and Girls Foundation of Southwest Pennsylvania launched a "
Girlcott" of the store to protest the sale of T-shirts displaying messages such as "Who needs brains when you have these?" ("these" meaning breasts), "Available for parties," and "I had a nightmare I was a
brunette." The campaign received national coverage on
The Today Show, and the company pulled the shirts from stores on November 5, 2005. Five days after this media coverage, the company pulled two of the shirts from its shelves, released an apology to girls for producing the T-shirts, and agreed to have corporate executives meet with the "Girlcott" girls at the company's headquarters. A T-shirt controversy arose again over the company's Back-to-School 2009 collection of "humor tees". One shirt proclaims "Show the twins" above a picture of a young woman with her blouse open to two men. Two other shirts state "Female streaking encouraged" and "Female Students Wanted for Sexual Research". The
American Family Association disapproved of the influence of the "sex-as-recreation" lifestyle shirts, and asked the brand to remove its "sexualized shirts" from display.
Brand protection Because of extensive
counterfeiting of its products, the company launched a
brand protection program in 2006 to combat the problem worldwide (focusing more on China, Hong Kong, Japan and Korea) by working with law enforcement globally. The program is headed by a former
FBI Supervisory Special Agent who was part of the FBI's Intellectual Property Rights program, and covers all the company's brands. The company says that the program "will improve current practices and strategies by focusing on eliminating the supply of illicit Abercrombie & Fitch products." In August 2011, the company offered
Mike "The Situation" Sorrentino and other cast members of the MTV reality show
Jersey Shore a "substantial payment" if they stopped wearing Abercrombie-branded clothes, stating "We are deeply concerned that Mr. Sorrentino's association with our brand could cause significant damage to our image." In November 2011, Sorrentino filed a lawsuit against the company after it allegedly violated his copyrights in making shirts that said "The Fitchuation" and "GTL...You Know The Deal". The case was dismissed in July 2013.
Jeffries' 2006 target demographic quote In 2013, a 2006
Salon interview with then-CEO
Mike Jeffries went viral, causing public backlash against A&F's marketing practices. Jeffries comments – that his brand is only suitable for "the good-looking, cool kids," and that there are people who do not belong in his clothes, namely, overweight people – came under fire. These quotes, which were the basis for the article's "youth, sex and casual superiority" headline, went largely unnoticed when the article was published in 2006, until they resurfaced in May 2013 after actor
Kirstie Alley brought them up in an
Entertainment Tonight interview, and prominent daytime talk-show host
Ellen DeGeneres spoke out against the company. Jeffries issued an official statement on May 17, 2013, regarding the news articles, saying, "I want to address some of my comments that have been circulating from a 2006 interview. While I believe this seven-year-old, resurrected quote has been taken out of context, I sincerely regret that my choice of words was interpreted in a manner that has offended." He also stated, "We are completely opposed to any discrimination, bullying, derogatory characterizations or other anti-social behavior based on race, gender, body type or other individual characteristics." ==Stores==