When I mention the word Chappals or slippers the first image that comes to your mind is that of the humble blue and white soles with an easy to slip into ‘Y’ shaped blue straps. When Bata in the 50’s introduced the brand name Hawaii for slippers, it was a best seller, as the common man had finally found an affordable footwear with a feel good brand name that would give him a feel of walking the pristine beaches of the far away Hawaii, while in reality he was strolling down the shores of the Marina in Madras.
Hawaii went on to
become a generic and people simply bought Hawaii and not chappals anymore and
the brand name itself was used in many households as a weapon to shape the
lives of many a wayward youngsters, both by their parents and the girls next
door.
One of the most
durable pieces of footwear of the days, as the soles outlived the straps
everyone had a spare strap at home. A safety pin is all that was required to
ensure that you could reach that last mile home and then replace it with a
brand new one.
As the nation and
the people grew in economic stature the poor little Hawaii found its place
being moved to the insignificant corners of the house and slowly got confined
to the wash rooms only. And what a fall
from grace it was for a name like Hawaii, to be called bathroom slippers. The
final nail on the coffin was when the Indian PM a few
years back commented that he wanted to see people who ‘even’ wear Hawaii
chappal in a hawai jahaz. A statement akin to the one made by Shashi Tharoor
referring to Economy class passengers as Cattle class, but the former quote
courted less controversy for obvious reasons.
With Globalisation
and opening up of the economy fashion statements changed and that brought about
a change to the semantics of casual foot wear too. Flip Flops appeared from
nowhere, slippers and chappals were crass and unsophisticated. Manufacturers of
the good old Hawaii imitations also changed the design to remove the stigma
associated with the blue and white bathroom slippers!
Branding came into our lives and turned to an obsession
and we were respected for the brand we adorned.
1 comment:
Very well written Geoji. Kicks in nostalgia too
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