L’eggs
Encyclopedia
L'eggs is a popular brand of pantyhose
Pantyhose
Pantyhose are sheer, close-fitting legwear, covering the wearer's body from the waist to the feet. Mostly considered to be a woman's and girl's garment, pantyhose appeared in the 1960s, and they provided a convenient alternative to stockings...

 introduced in 1969 by Hanes
HanesBrands
HanesBrands Inc. is a clothing company based in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. It employs 50,000 people internationally. On September 6, 2006 the company was spun off by the Sara Lee Corporation....

. The hosiery premiered a unique trade dress
Trade dress
Trade dress is a legal term of art that generally refers to characteristics of the visual appearance of a product or its packaging that signify the source of the product to consumers...

 by placing its product in white plastic oversized chicken-egg-shaped containers and garnering shelf space in supermarkets and drugstores, most frequently on revolving carousel L'eggs displays (called the "L'eggs Boutique"), designed to draw customer attention to the product.

The L'eggs egg

The L'eggs name, package and logo were created by designer Roger Ferriter, working in the design studio of Herb Lubalin Associates in New York City in 1969. On the morning of the scheduled presentation of the marketing and packaging ideas to the Hanes Corporation for the new low-cost pantyhose launch, Ferriter was not satisfied that the work was sufficiently creative. In an effort to revisit the name and packaging one last time, he attempted to "experience" the product in some new way, hoping that the exercise would suggest a new creative direction for the branding. Among his efforts, he attempted to compress a pair of pantyhose in his fist, wondering how compact the product could become. Staring at his clenched fist with the pantyhose inside he was struck with the possibility that the package could be an egg. Just as quickly, he realized that "egg" rhymes with "leg," and then (adding the popular mid-century marketing boost of giving a product name some French-sounding twist), he incorporated the L (French for "the" when followed by a vowel such as the "e" of eggs) and arrived at L'eggs. Some sketches were prepared in time for the presentation, including a logo that incorporated two egg-influenced letter "g"s and thus was born one of the most successful product launches in history. (This account is based on recollections by a student who studied with Ferriter at the School of Visual Arts several years after the launch. The events of that morning were described by Ferriter.)

In order to compete with the hugely successful L'eggs branding, in 1973 the Kayser-Roth Corporation (then owned by Gulf+Western) introduced No Nonsense
No nonsense
No Nonsense is a brand of women's legwear, owned by Kayser-Roth , sold at many food, drug, mass and club outlets...

 pantyhose. The product name was adopted in an attempt to denigrate the perceived "gimmicky" appeal of the L'eggs name, logo and packaging, but to little avail, as the Hanes brand continued to dominate the pantyhose market. This is a testament to the power of creative marketing because in many respects L'eggs and No Nonsense are essentially similar, except for the lycra content, that gave L'eggs a superior fit and sheen that many found appealing.

For the first several years, the product's slogan, "Our L'eggs fit your legs," appeared in in print and TV ads.

Though the L'eggs egg became integral to the brand and their marketing and advertising, in more recent years, parent company HanesBrands Inc. has ceased packaging the hosiery in the hard plastic shells. Notwithstanding the secondary uses for the eggs by crafters, artists, and hobbyists, the two-part plastic egg containers were seen as an example of wastefulness.

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