THEY’RE high street leaders when it comes to affordable wardrobe staples.
But have you ever been in a Uniqlo store and wondered where they got their name from?
Uniqlo have revealed where their store name actually came from[/caption]
And while they had wanted to register ‘Uniclo’ as the brand name, but staff accidentally put a ‘Q’ instead of the ‘C’[/caption]
The shop took to TikTok to set the record straight about the name origin, as they explained that it actually came about due to “a typo”.
“The company is originally called Unique Clothing Warehouse,” they wrote over the top of the clip.
“We wanted to register the brand under ‘Uniclo’.
“But in 1988, the staff in charge of registering, misread C for Q.
“The name stuck and now we’re known globally as UNIQLO!”
“Ever wondered how UNIQLO got its name?” they wrote in the caption.
And loads of people in the comments insisted that the error worked out well for everyone.
“There are no mistakes just happy accidents- Bob Ross,” one wrote.
To which Uniqlo replied: “You’re right!”
“Best typo ever. Everything’s aligned,” another added.
“The best mistake was made,” a third agreed.
“The typo makes the brand name better,” someone else commented.
While another laughed: “They had one job to do!”
Others even suggested the employees should have “got a raise”.
“Hope the staff who made the typo got a raise,” one wrote.
“Did the staff get a raise?” another wondered.
Why the high street still rules!
Fabulous’ Fashion Director, Tracey Lea Sayer shares her thoughts.
I WAS 10 when I first discovered the utter joy of high street shopping for clothes with my mum and nan.
Going into town on Saturday became a family tradition – a girls’ day out we would look forward to all week.
My mum’s favourite shop was M&S, where she would gaze at jackets with big shoulder pads and floral sundresses, while my nan would make a beeline for John Lewis and their classic coats and elegant court shoes.
I was all over Tammy Girl – Etam’s little sister – and Chelsea Girl, which was later rebranded to high street fave River Island.
I would spend hours in the changing rooms, watched keenly by my two cheerleaders, who gave the thumbs up – or thumbs down – on what I was trying on.
Frilly Ra-Ra skirts, duster coats, polka dot leggings, puff balls, boob tubes… I tried them all, often making my nan howl with laughter.
Fashion wasn’t so fast back in the 1980s and every item was cherished and worn until it fell apart – literally – at the seams.
At 18, I went to art college and my tastes became more refined.
Extra cash from a part-time job in a bar meant I could move on to slightly more expensive stores, like Warehouse, Miss Selfridge and the mecca that was Topshop.
I knew at this point I wanted to work in fashion because the high street had totally seduced me.
One day, I wrote an article for a competition in a glossy mag about my love of retail therapy and my favourite LBD – and I won!
That led me to where I am today – Fashion Director of Fabulous.
It’s not just me that loves the high street – big-name designers are fans, too. When ‘Cool Britannia’ hit in the Nineties, they all turned up in one big store.
‘Designers at Debenhams’ was a stroke of genius by Debenhams CEO Belinda Earl, designer Ben de Lisi and fashion director Spencer Hawken, who introduced diffusion ranges from John Rocha, Matthew Williamson and Betty Jackson to name a few.
This meant we could all afford a bit of luxury and wear a well-known designer’s signature style.
Years later I hosted a night with Debenhams and Fabulous for 250 readers, who were in awe meeting all the designers. It was a real career highlight for me.
In 2004, H&M started rolling out their international designer collabs.
Karl Lagerfeld was first, followed by Roberto Cavalli, Marni, Stella McCartney, Maison Martin Margiela, Sonia Rykiel, Comme des Garçons, Balmain, Versace and many, many more. I could barely contain myself!
Then in 2007, Kate Moss launched her first collection with Topshop, with thousands queuing along London’s Oxford Street.
I remember sitting behind Ms Moss and Topshop boss Philip Green at a London Fashion Week Topshop Unique catwalk show.
I had my three-year-old daughter, Frankie, in tow and we both made the news the next day after we were papped behind Kate, my supermodel girl crush.
At the time, the high street was on fire. Who needed designer buys when Mango stocked tin foil trousers just like the designer Isabel Marant ones and you could buy a bit of Barbara Hulanicki’s legendary brand Biba from Topshop?
High street stores even started to storm London Fashion week.
Although Topshop Unique had shown collections since 2001, in 2013 River Island showed its first collection in collaboration with global superstar Rihanna, who was flown in by a friend of mine on a private jet. KER-CHING!
A whole new generation of high profile high street collabs followed.
Beyoncé created Ivy Park with Topshop’s Philip Green and I even flew to LA for Fabulous to shoot the Kardashian sisters in their bodycon “Kollection” for Dorothy Perkins.
I am pleased to say they were the absolute dream cover stars.
Fast forward to 2024 and while the high street doesn’t look exactly like it did pre-Covid, it has made a gallant comeback.
Stores like M&S, Reserved and Zara, and designer collabs like Victoria Beckham X Mango and Rochelle Humes for Next are giving me all the feels.
The supermarkets have really come into their own, too, smashing it with gorgeous collections that look expensive, but at prices that still allow us to afford the weekly shop.
The last 30 years of high street fashion have been one big adventure for me. Bring on the next 30!
“Woah. Amazing! so what happened to the staff?” a third commented.
And there were loads who admitted they had no idea that’s where the name had come from.
“I have pants from Unique Clothing Warehouse,” one wrote.
“I didn’t realise that was Uniqlo,” another added.
“OMG I LOVE THAT,” a third commented.
“I used to watch Federer wear Uniqlo and thought it was UniQld (University of Queensland Australia),” someone else wrote.
“Didn’t realise until couple of years ago!”
“I thought it was UNIQLD as in a giant merch store for the university of queensland lollll,” another agreed.
“I like UNIQLO more, it’s more ‘unique’,” someone else insisted.