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Martha Rosenberg

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Thanks for Nothing: Fur Coats Becoming "Gifts" You Can't Wear Anywhere

Posted: 12/27/2011 10:10 am

Like Hollywood, set to ban the sale of fur in 2012, Chicago is no longer a fur capital. One reason is the annual Fur Free Friday parade held the day after Thanksgiving. For 25 years, the march has crawled down the Magnificent Mile, stopping at every furrier along the way. Some years the parade has attracted 800 marchers.

Commensurate with the best street theater, the march has featured coffins, piles of animal pelts, dangling steel jaw traps, mock burials and phalanxes of monster masks for those monster enough to wear fur. It has featured PETA style disrobing (confirming the observation that the prettiest women lean toward animal causes), interpretive dance and of course a drum corps.

Since the late 1990s, some of the scheduled "stops" where a spokesman delivers a speak-out about the cruelty of the fur trade, the stores are happily gone. Evans, the world's largest furrier who anchored the State street shopping corridor since the Great Depression went out of business in 1999 citing "anti-fur activism that focused on convincing the American and European public that wearing any kind of fur was cruel and malicious to the animal it was taken from." Evans had a second store on Michigan Avenue and on the day of the Fur Free Friday parade, it would hire a billboard truck to park in front of it and occlude its sign.

Across the street from the Evans State street store, Mysels Furs, in the Palmer House Hilton, stood as a last bastion against anti-fur sentiment. Its State street door was actually locked and an Addams Family-esque live male mannequin performed in the window, furthering the crypt-like feel. No one ever saw a live customer. Mysels, too, is gone.

Also gone is a Michigan avenue store called D'ion Furs whose slogan was, "Give her her own D'ion." But nearby, on Michigan avenue, Andriana Furs still stands despite news reports in 2009 that Sohrab Tebyanian was using the store to launder drug money and pay employees.

Once upon a time, Fur Free Friday was the one day the tables were turned on the Mag Mile and women in full length minks and lynxes were not admired but booed as they underwent a perp walk past the marchers. But now, there are few furs in Chicago (except for last year's "fox hat" fad; what was up with that?)

But the fur industry is alive and well, bolstered by cheap "Asian wolf" skins from China reported to be dog. And department stores like Macy's hawk the heartless outerwear pretending they have never seen the videos on YouTube that show where fur "comes from."

In fact, the fur and fashion industry deliberately mix faux and real fur to deny consumers an ethical choice. They dye "fun" furs that are from real animals wild colors to look fake and funky and people buy them. Fun furs are not fun for the animals.


 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MrPragmatic
10:37 PM on 01/10/2012
It's not Hollywood that is banning fur it's West Hollywood. Big distinction since West Hollywood is a separate city from Los Angeles while Hollywood is actually a neighborhood in L.A.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jhnnxn
Won't say it face to face? Don't post it online!
02:04 PM on 01/08/2012
Sad that there are so many people whose own lives are so drab that they need to interject themselves into the lives of others to feel important
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qsfoxx
still chasing the wascally wabbit...
03:42 AM on 12/29/2011
Why is it that some people feel that they are perfectly within their rights to promote their political or non-political agenda by flagrantly infringing upon the rights of other people?
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GOODDOC1
"civil war" is an oxymoron
01:31 AM on 12/29/2011
Some people in Alaska wear and sell fur coats and hats without being hassled.
12:09 AM on 12/29/2011
It's a free country -- or used to be. (It seemingly is becoming less and less so.) Let consumers decide what they want to wear. If something is amiss (i.e., unnecessary cruelty to animals), then educate the population/increase awareness, but don't be so militant about it! If people still want to buy it after knowing about alleged cruelty, well, it's their money. I don't wear fur, but I can't really afford it, and don't live in a place that gets cold enough to justify the expense. But I sure would like the option if I lived someplace colder...the free market works if people stop interfering. Don't like fur or what the fur trade does? Don't buy furs.
09:44 PM on 12/28/2011
Maybe they should have left the fur on the mink/rabbit/ fox. I'm sure they needed it more. There are so many faux furs that are easier to care for and are hard to tell from real fur. This kind of cruelty isn't necessary any more, with heat in cars and homes and stores or any where else you want to go. It's not the 1800's anymore.
Kali03
I am an Obama supporter
09:02 AM on 12/29/2011
It's easy to find great fake fur. My grandmother had an amazing fake that looked so real that she eventually had to stop wearing it because she'd get dirty looks. She gave it to me for use while I was in graduate school and I, too, eventually re-gifted it because I got tired of telling people that, while tragic, the reality is that only thousands of tiny baby synthetics gave their lives for my coat but no, this was not real fur.

It was a pretty coat but it was a hassle to wear.

I can understand if someone is in Alaska, who hunted the animal and ate the useful parts, and then used the fur. It's so cold there, and they don't seem to waste what they hunt. But to needlessly slaughter lynx or fox or any other creature, simply for the fur...I'd prefer not to support that with my purchasing dollar. And even though I was kind of annoyed about my grandmother's coat, I'd rather have that kind of awareness (and some annoyance) than blind acceptance of animal torture.

Now, I do have an excellent fake fur leopard collar on a jacket that is so obviously fake that nobody glares and I do love that piece dearly!

:)
08:00 PM on 12/28/2011
Who says I can't wear fur? Having grown up knowing trappers and those who raise animals for fur, I have never heard of any of them doing any of the things these people say they do. If you mistreat the animals you don't get a good pelt, and why would you not kill them before doing anything that would hurt them? It is just not good business to endanger the product you are selling. It is all PETA propaganda.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Beth Horne
11:27 PM on 12/28/2011
I agree with your post 100%!!! I have real and faux furs and I have inherited furs from my grandmother as well. I will wear what I want, when I want, and if someone EVER were to dare to throw paint or anything else on me, they should take into consideration that I am 5'10", redheaded, and have an extremely violent temper when attacked, lol. A paint thrower might end up becoming a nice new jacket for me if they were stupid enough to attempt to ruin my clothing!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Margaret Penny Wood
12:40 AM on 12/29/2011
I do not like PETA, but I have seen real videos of raccoons being skinned while only clubbed to a half-conscious state and coming awake as their skin is cut off of them - it was horrible! There is no need to raise or capture animals for their fur anymore since manmade products are just as warm. When you wear leather it is just a byproduct of the meat industry, but the fur industry is truly cruel and inhumane!
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irrenmann
won't read your angry replies :D
04:30 PM on 12/28/2011
Yes, it's brutal when your friends gift you expensive furs that you cannot wear without dealing with the anti-fur lobby. Is there a HuffPost "White People Problems" section?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
12Purple
my microbio isn't empty yet communicates nothing
03:45 PM on 01/04/2012
To see others: http://first-world-problems.com/

I don't wear fur, but I don't throw blood on anyone either ...
03:30 PM on 12/28/2011
I'm in St. Petersburg, Russia right now. I've always had a fur coat, and just purchased a used mink online before I left the States. I stood in bitter wind today and have to say, I didn't feel a thing: fur just drapes better around you than down or faux fur. If you live in a warmer climate, don't buy a fur. If you need one, buy one.
01:38 PM on 12/28/2011
cool.
03:47 PM on 12/28/2011
Unless they're wearing fur, then they're warm.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BebeLush
The Tao of Pooh
12:56 PM on 12/28/2011
Good riddance!
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
11:29 PM on 12/27/2011
My Mother has a fur jacket. Now sure how vintage it is, but she had dreams of handing it down to me so it must have been when I was a child as there is no way I'd fit into that jacket.

She wears it to walk the dog on chilly winter nights. Otherwise, it pretty much sits in the hall closet.

I'm certainly not disappointed I'll never inherit it. There is plenty of faux fur out there that is the match or better than a fur coat.

I have nothing against fur but I do object to needless cruelty in the process. Our clothes should be as humane as our diets. I don't support CAFOs and I don't wear fur.
12:01 AM on 12/29/2011
Where did you get the idea that our meat diet is humane?
Kali03
I am an Obama supporter
09:04 AM on 12/29/2011
Well, she said she doesn't support CAFOs, so she probably is eating humane-harvest meat.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
traceymarie
the President is black, deal with it
04:57 PM on 12/27/2011
to each his own. 1/3 of the american adults are overweight, they are not that way because they eat veggies. To attack fur wearers yet say nothing of meat eaters is disingenuous.
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elcerritan
My bio is not micro
12:17 AM on 12/28/2011
They aren't that way because they eat meat, either. By the way, French fries and potato chips are veggies and they've certainly been known to contribute to America's obesity epidemic.
Kali03
I am an Obama supporter
09:05 AM on 12/29/2011
And didn't pizza just get declared "a vegetable"?
07:53 PM on 12/28/2011
meat is a necessary part of a healthy diet, fur coats are not in any way necessary since there are PLENTY of alternatives....more attractive ones at that!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
traceymarie
the President is black, deal with it
08:09 PM on 12/28/2011
to each his own....I am an omnivore and I also see nothing wrong with fur.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Beth Horne
11:31 PM on 12/28/2011
HA! Say that after you've worn a gorgeous chinchilla or sable! Sorry, but I own both and I can assure you that REAL fur feels much better and is incredibly warmer. Those bs videos about mistreating animals to get their pelts are so stupid, anyone who has any experience in the actual industry knows they are total hype to get PETA donations. Don't be a sheep!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mzrecycle
a very subtle micro-bio
02:21 PM on 12/27/2011
I agree with the wear faux, not fur idea. I don't quite get the headline. It doesn't seem to go with the story. Maybe I missed something...

I can't imagine that real fur, even dog fur could be as cheap as faux. Those who buy something they think is faux must be spending a LOT to get real that is passed off as faux.

I have a faux Lynx coat that I really love. I can't see why there is need of real. Real fur is heavy. This coat is very warm, but not at all heavy. It's a good quality faux and I've worn it in a pet store on the way home from an event. The woman at check out was quite upset I would wear fur till I assured her it was faux...
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LemmonHerk
03:36 PM on 12/28/2011
Not all real fur is heavy. Mink, especially sheared mink, and sable are quite light. Fox is heavy, rabbit is light. And the check-out clerk was out of line. Regardless of being mistaken that you were wearing real fur, you should have told her to do her job and mind her own business, then you should complained to the manager of the store.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Beth Horne
11:33 PM on 12/28/2011
Sometimes you need a heavy coat. And as stated earlier, not all furs are heavy. They ARE however much warmer than faux, and I have both and can attest to that fact personally.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mzrecycle
a very subtle micro-bio
07:16 AM on 12/29/2011
My comment was not about the warmth, but the weight. Fur is heavy on the body while wearing. I suppose if I was in the far North, the difference in the warmth of fur would matter. In most of the U.S. that extra warmth would mean I wouldn't be able to wear it but on the coldest days. And I'm a very cold natured person.