Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    TRENDING :
    • These AI bots want to help fans navigate World Cup host cities 
    • Aren’t Billionaires People, Too? Yes, but…
    • Meet the online superfans who turned their Stan Twitter experience into full-time social media jobs
    • An Anti-anti-aging eyewear brand bets America is finally ready to embrace getting older
    • Real enterprise transformation with AI requires six foundations, not one. Here’s how to build them all
    • Ukraine Could Be Granted Associate EU Membership
    • Our fears about AI are really fears about capitalism
    • South Korea Aims To Accurately Identify AI Content
    Populist Bulletin
    • Home
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    • Economy
    • Business
    • Headline News
    Populist Bulletin
    Home»Business»An Anti-anti-aging eyewear brand bets America is finally ready to embrace getting older
    Business 6 Mins Read

    An Anti-anti-aging eyewear brand bets America is finally ready to embrace getting older

    Business 6 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    In Japan, there is a national public holiday called Keiro no Hi—Respect for our Elders Day—dedicated to honoring the wisdom of the generations that have come before us. In Hindu tradition, the third stage of life, Vanaprastha, frames later years as a period of spiritual depth and accumulated authority. It is hard to picture an analogue in a country that produced “OK, boomer.”

    Here, the picture is grimmer. According to the World Health Organization, ageism in the form of negative age stereotypes costs the United States $63 billion a year in excess healthcare spending. An AARP study estimated that age discrimination in the workplace cost the U.S. economy $850 billion in lost productivity in 2018. Meanwhile, the global anti-aging industry — built on the premise that aging is a problem to be reversed — is forecast to grow from roughly $80 billion in 2025 to nearly $150 billion within a decade.

    And yet something is shifting. Last month, The New York Times Magazine ran a cover story chronicling the unprecedented spike in older women walking fashion week: 50-year-old Stephanie Cavalli opening Chanel, 61-year-old Mariacarla Boscono walking for Tom Ford and Miu Miu, Gillian Anderson and Helen Mirren modeling for L’Oréal Paris.

    Tim Parr [Photo: Caddis]

    Tim Parr—the founder of an eyewear brand called Caddis that targets older customers—saw this moment coming a decade ago. Historically, Americans have tended to treat aging as an embarrassment. Parr believes his generation—Gen X—has no intention of following this playbook. They want to stay fashion-forward and keep pursuing their careers and passions.

    Caddis is now launching its biggest argument that we’re thinking about aging wrong in a new campaign called “Yet.” It is meant to capture what Parr calls “the space between now and next.” “You haven’t gotten your doctorate. Yet,” he says. “You haven’t learned to surf in Costa Rica. Yet. It’s a very simple way of changing mindset.” It’s also a thesis statement for the entire company, which has spent eight years arguing—to investors, to retailers, to customers—that the way America talks about getting older is broken. And for the first time, the broader culture appears to be catching up.

    [Photo: Caddis]

    Reading glasses as Trojan horse

    In 2013, Parr launched a bluegrass band called One Grass Two Grass. A decade ago, when he was in his fifties, he was on tour with the band, going up and down the West Coast, when he realized he couldn’t read his setlist. He stopped in at an optometrist in Southern California and walked out frustrated with the selection of twee pink and green cat-eye frames. Reading glasses, it turned out, were the last unbranded territory in eyewear: a product that 90% of people over 40 eventually need, presented as a $20 drugstore embarrassment. “It was unsexy, dusted over, kicked to the curb,” Parr says. “So that was our in.”

    [Photo: Caddis]

    But Caddis wasn’t really about reading glasses. Reading glasses were the Trojan horse. Parr’s clarity arrived in a VC meeting in San Francisco around 2015. The investor liked the positioning, but when she flipped over the sample box, she saw that the brand was targeting older consumers. “She said no one wants to believe they are the age that they are,” Parr recalls. “Everyone wants to believe they are fifteen years younger.”

    He left the meeting and did the math. Did he want to be 32 again? Hard no. “By the time I hit the street I realized we’re actually not even in the eyewear business,” he says. “We’re in the age business. I love being David up to the Goliath. I need something to punch up at.”

    [Photo: Caddis]

    Caddis began shipping in 2018 with the tagline “Get Older. Own It. See Stuff.” Today, the brand has roughly 600 wholesale accounts and is sold in Nordstrom and Bloomingdale’s alongside its own retail stores. Frames retail around $110 — well below the optometrist’s premium tier, well above drugstore readers. The product, Parr insists, is just a way of telling a broader story.

    [Photo: Caddis]

    Caddis campaigns feature people in their 50s and 60s—not models, but real customers, artists, and musicians. Each quarter, the brand rolls out a single-word campaign. The last one, “Unfollow,” takes aim at social media and self-worth. The next, launching in June, is called “Yet.” “Society tells you you’re past great things once you enter your fifties,” he says. “The Yet campaign says you’re not.”

    Music is the brand’s other connective thread. Parr came off the road from his bluegrass band to start Caddis, and 1% of gross revenue goes to a nonprofit he founded in 2021 called Music Farming, which funds music education programs across the country. Research has linked active music-making to protective effects against Alzheimer’s and dementia, and music therapy is now used clinically for epilepsy and neuroplasticity.

    [Photo: Caddis]

    The Patagonia playbook

    Parr picked up the model for his business from Yvon Chouinard. After he stopped touring with his band, he worked at Patagonia from 2019 to 2022, brought in to help run the surf brand Patagonia had recently acquired. He spent a lot of time with Chouinard, driving Highway 1, surfing, talking shop. What stuck with Parr was Chouinard’s approach to business. “He argued that the point of building a business is to make the world better,” he says. “It’s not hard. There’s a full spectrum of causes you can support. And it does nothing but increase your probability of survival.”

    [Photo: Caddis]

    But a social mission isn’t enough. Parr has watched a lot of his millennial-era peers—the direct-to-consumer brands that promised to do well by doing good—implode in the last two years including Everlane, Allbirds, and Beautycounter. A big part of the problem is that they were overcapitalized, which forces a brand to prioritize growth over profitability. With Caddis, Parr is focused on growing at a sustainable pace, but staying ambitious about using the brand platform to reimagine what aging could look like. And he believes that society might just be catching up with his message.

    Americans spent decades trying to look 32 forever. The next two might be spent figuring out what it actually means to be 52, 62, 72. Caddis is making the eyewear for it.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    These AI bots want to help fans navigate World Cup host cities 

    May 26, 2026

    Meet the online superfans who turned their Stan Twitter experience into full-time social media jobs

    May 26, 2026

    Real enterprise transformation with AI requires six foundations, not one. Here’s how to build them all

    May 26, 2026
    Top News
    World Politics 4 Mins Read

    BREAKING NEWS: Orbán’s Adviser Dismantles Obama’s Lies and Slams His Comments on Hungary’s Democracy: “Barack Obama Doesn’t Care About Democracy, He’s Concerned with Preserving the Liberal Elite’s Dominance”

    World Politics 4 Mins Read

    Balázs Orbán, political adviser to Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and a key member of Hungary’s…

    Market Talk – September 4, 2025

    September 4, 2025

    Thousands of nurses go on strike at major New York City hospitals over contract disputes

    January 12, 2026

    Warner Bros. shareholders approve $81 billion mega merger with Paramount

    April 24, 2026
    Top Trending
    Business 6 Mins Read

    These AI bots want to help fans navigate World Cup host cities 

    Business 6 Mins Read

    When soccer fans head to the FIFA World Cup starting in June, they’ll have…

    US Politics 8 Mins Read

    Aren’t Billionaires People, Too? Yes, but…

    US Politics 8 Mins Read

    When ordinary Americans are forced to skip meals to afford healthcare, it’s…

    Business 9 Mins Read

    Meet the online superfans who turned their Stan Twitter experience into full-time social media jobs

    Business 9 Mins Read

    Katelyn Ide was thirteen when she first logged onto Twitter from a…

    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    About us

    The Populist Bulletin was founded with a fervent commitment to inform, inspire, empower and spark meaningful conversations about the economy, business, politics, government accountability, globalization, and the preservation of American cultural heritage.

    We are devoted to delivering straightforward, unfiltered, compelling, relatable stories that resonate with the majority of the American public, while boldly challenging false mainstream narratives that seem to only serve entrenched elitists, and foreign interests.

    Top Picks

    These AI bots want to help fans navigate World Cup host cities 

    May 26, 2026

    Aren’t Billionaires People, Too? Yes, but…

    May 26, 2026

    Meet the online superfans who turned their Stan Twitter experience into full-time social media jobs

    May 26, 2026
    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    Copyright © 2025 Populist Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.