Gen Z's Fashion Paradox: 65% Want Quality Over Fast Fashion, But Price Remains Barrier--Jovani Responds with Designer Prom Line Under $500
New York brand addresses documented gap between Gen Z's sustainability values and shopping behavior with accessible luxury collection
NEW YORK, Oct. 24, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- While 94% of Generation Z consumers say they believe action is needed for sustainability, 90% still regularly purchase fast fashion—creating what researchers call the "fast fashion paradox." Now, a 42-year-old New York design house is attempting to resolve that contradiction.
Jovani, which dresses over 500,000 high school students annually for prom, is launching a designer quality line under $500 for its 2026 prom collection, directly addressing what Sheffield Hallam University researchers identified as Gen Z's primary barrier to sustainable shopping: price.
"Every study shows the same thing," says Julie Durocher, Jovani's lead designer for 18 years. "Gen Z wants quality. They want clothes that last. Sixty-five percent say they want to shop more sustainably. But when the alternative costs three times more, they're stuck buying fast fashion and feeling guilty about it."
The research backs this up. A Sheffield Hallam study found that while 51% of Gen Z consumers want to stop or reduce fast fashion consumption, all six participants interviewed cited price as the main barrier preventing them from buying sustainable, quality clothing.
This gap matters. With prom spending averaging between $600 and $1,139 per student according to Visa surveys, the dress alone can consume a significant portion of that budget. Traditional designer gowns range from $800 to $2,000, pushing many families toward cheaper, lower-quality options that are worn once and discarded.
Jovani's approach challenges the assumption that quality requires premium pricing. The brand's under-$500 collection uses the same New York design team, hand-sewn construction methods, and quality standards as its couture pieces, which can cost upward of $2,000. The 2026 collection includes over 1,000 designs across all price points.
"Fast fashion became successful because it solved a real problem—it was affordable," Durocher explains. "But it created bigger problems. We're saying you don't have to choose between your values and your budget anymore."
The timing aligns with broader industry shifts. Research shows that 65% of Gen Z consumers want to shop with higher quality, and the secondhand market is projected to reach $64 billion by 2029, outpacing fast fashion as younger consumers seek alternatives.
Founded in 1983 in New York's fashion district, Jovani has spent four decades creating special occasion wear. The brand's expansion into truly accessible pricing represents a departure from luxury fashion's traditional model, where designer labels rarely compete below the $500 mark.
Whether other established designers follow suit remains to be seen. But for an industry watching Gen Z's spending power grow, solving the paradox between their stated values and actual shopping behavior may determine who succeeds.
About Jovani
Founded in 1983, Jovani is a New York-based design house specializing in prom, evening, and special occasion dresses. The brand designs over 1,000 styles annually and distributes through authorized retailers worldwide.
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SOURCE Jovani Fashions



