By LINDA DYETT
That’s what Negative Underwear, the brand with the unusual name, is all about. It was quick to sense the emergence of what’s come to be known as body positivity. That, and giving body positivity a spare but sexy allure, are its forte.
“There was one major player–Victoria’s Secret, with with Agent Provocateur and Kiki de Montparnasse at the high end,” said Marissa Vosper, one of Negative Underwear’s co-founders. “Women were shopping by default at Victoria’s Secret, but were embarrassed to be seen carrying its shopping bags.
What was missing was well-designed, minimalist, functional innerwear. Or as Vosper put it, “No one was in the Isabel Marant-Helmut Lang space. Nothing felt useful, chic, or cool.”
So she and Lauren Schwab, who’d been friends since their undergraduate days at the University of Pennsylvania, decided to ditch their starter careers in finance and brand marketing and shake things up. Fashion lovers, both of them, they sensed a growing need in women not just for comfort, but for authenticity in the way their bodies are shaped.
As Vosper put it, the issue is “owning your own femininity.”
From the outset, with their first designs—bras, briefs, and a thong—it’s been Schwab who’s focused on product design, development, production, planning, and finance, while Vosper does brand design, web and customer experience, partnerships, and marketing. Plus, they hired a tech designer and an assistant tech designer. There are now fourteen people who get it all done.
Negative Underwear’s customers number over 100,000, in a wide age range, many posting glowing reviews. The brand has been written up in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Vogue, New York magazine, Elle, InStyle, Real Simple, Refinery29, and FastCo. And its growth tripled in size not only in 2020, when we were all necessarily shopping online, but already in 2019, as bralettes hit the mainstream.
For me, Negative Underwear excels in two areas. The first is fabrics. The choices—seven in all– are lush, soft, drapey, stretchy, and remarkably strong. No wonder Schwab and Vosper name their collections after the fabrics they’re made of. The following two are standouts:
SIEVE is a nylon-Spandex power micromesh from Belgium that the two discovered at an Interfiliere fair. It was so “soft yet powerful,” said Schwab, that they snapped it up. Its secret? Unlike most fabrics, with their gridded weave, Sieve, a tulle, is designed in a honeycomb pattern that allows for multi-way stretchability. It's available in the bestselling Non-Wire and Triangle bras as well as the pull-on Bra Top, a wired and a lined bra, a thong, abbreviated briefs, and high-waist briefs.
Negative Underwear especially excels in its bra designs. The bestselling Sieve Non-Wire and Whipped Triangle bras, in particular, give flexible support, allowing the breasts to maintain their natural shape. This results in a softer, lower-slung torso silhouette that suits the athleisure- sneaker-ridden early 2020s. And when worn beneath vintage clothes from the 1940s–’90s, the Sieve and the Whipped give these styles the same contemporary edge they get from being worn with sneakers.
never forget this—consumed with terror right in front of I Sodi, the Italian restaurant. So preoccupied had I been preparing for the meeting that I forgot to put on a bra. Or so I thought. Then I remembered: I was wearing my brand-new Sieve. With its completely seamless, gently
curved cups, it was so ridiculously comfortable, it felt like absolutely nothing on beneath my sweater.
Of course, if anyone was going to put a new spin on sports bras, it was bound to be Negative Underwear. But how will Vosper and Schwab respond, as the Covid crisis eases up, to the emerging dress-up era, complete with makeup, perfume, and stiletto heels? I’m staying tuned to
this duo. They’re likely to have some creative revamps up their minimalist sleeves.
Based in New York, Linda Dyett is a long-time writer and editor. Her articles have appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Monocle, L’Officiel, New York magazine (and its Strategist website), Afar, and many other publications and websites. She served as an editor at Lear’s, Self, and Glamour, and is currently overseeing the nycitywoman.com website. As for the areas she’s covered over the years, they’ve included books, architecture, industrial and product design, medicine, wine, travel, and shopping. But her major interest is in skin—and everything that touches it. That includes clothing (not least lingerie, about which she’s passionate), beauty and dermatology products, and jewelry. And she’s also done publicity writing for a wide range of businesses, large and small. She’s reachable at ldyett@gmail.com