Chanel fitting rooms make people feel excited. Hermès fitting rooms make people feel tense.
At Chanel, the fitting room is spacious. There are oversized mirrors covering the walls, shimmering gold tables, and sofas upholstered in Chanel's iconic tweed. Even the tall doors are hidden once more behind heavy tweed curtains.
And there are always clothes hanging there that I never selected myself. Still with the price tags attached. As if someone had already decided, "This would look beautiful on you too."
I close the curtain and slowly change. But the moment I step outside, the atmosphere changes completely. Not only my SA, but nearby staff members gather around me.
"It looks amazing on you." "So beautiful." "This is exactly your style." "Wait, try these shoes with it." "This bag would match perfectly."
Compliments and recommendations begin to surround me. And strangely enough, inside that atmosphere, I genuinely start wanting to buy.
Of course, the clothes themselves are seductive too. Every season, Chanel creates pieces that are difficult to resist. Jackets, skirts, knits, trench coats, cardigans. And those unmistakably feminine bags and shoes. Depending on how they are styled together, the entire mood of the season changes.
The Chanel fitting room feels less like a place to try on clothes, and more like a place where you transform into a more confident version of yourself.
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Hermès is completely different.
The fitting rooms are surprisingly small. One or two mirrors, a stainless steel rack fixed to the wall, a square sofa in deep rouge ash leather, and a small stool. Rather than the theatrical glamour of high-end luxury, it feels closer to quiet minimalism.
The collections also move within a familiar rhythm. Shirts, blouses, dresses, coats. Excellent fabrics, familiar silhouettes, repeating patterns. After seeing them for years, a thought occasionally appears:
"Do I really need to buy this again?"
I carry a few pieces into the fitting room, slowly try them on, and step outside. But the biggest difference from Chanel begins at that exact moment.
No SA is waiting in front of me. They are somewhere else, doing something else. I have to look for them myself. And oddly, that makes Hermès feel far lonelier than Chanel.
When the SA finally returns, the tone is calm and detached.
"There's only one left." "This size is sold out nationwide." "It's one of the most popular pieces this season." "It's very easy to wear with anything."
Even while describing a transitional coat that costs nearly $7,000, their voice carries almost no emotional energy. And somehow, that makes it even stranger. Because beneath the quietness, there is an unspoken assumption: "Of course this is something you would simply buy."
At times, purchasing clothing at Hermès feels less like styling and more like accumulating points toward a Birkin.
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Through these experiences, I realized something interesting. At Chanel, I become increasingly emotional. At Hermès, I become increasingly rational.
Hermès clothing is undeniably practical, and the materials are exceptional. But after a certain point, I no longer felt captivated into buying them. It began to feel closer to obligation than desire.
Looking back, the two brands operate completely differently — even inside the fitting room.
Chanel persuades through excitement.
Hermès selects through distance.
And somehow, even that feels perfectly true to who they are.