Sears’ Hip-Hop Hope: Store Signs LL Cool J To Do Apparel Brand

br>Edward Lampert is determined to prove to Wall Street he’s a retailer after all.

The Sears Holdings Corp. chairman and his team are making some long-awaited merchandising moves in the hedge fund billionaire’s retail empire in an attempt to reenergize Sears’ apparel offering, stimulate traffic and generate some buzz. And key among them is taking the well-trodden path of launching a celebrity label, albeit with an unexpected partner: rapper LL Cool J.

Sears has teamed up with the hip-hop veteran to launch a brand calledLL Cool J for Sears. The collection of casualwear for juniors, young men’s, girls’ and boys’ will roll out to 450 of Sears’ 900 stores in September and could generate as much as $100 million to $150 million in its first year, sources said.

If it succeeds, the brand could go a long way toward easing some of the growing skepticism over Lampert’s strategy for Sears Holdings, which combines Sears and Kmart, and whether the conglomerate is more of a financial play than a retail one. If all goes as planned, the LL Cool J brand would be a boost for the store’s “softer side,” said Irv Neger, Sears’ senior vice president of apparel, serving an urban consumer the retailer hasn’t been addressing. “We know this [urban] customer is in the store, but it’s a customer we weren’t reaching. With this brand, we see tremendous growth opportunity.”

As for what LL Cool J knows about women’s apparel, the hip-hop artist insists he’s had plenty of experience. “I was raised by a matriarch, I have a wife and three daughters, so I know what women are looking for when they shop for clothes,” he said. “My main concern with juniors is to make sure the fit is right. The fabrics have to feel nice on a woman’s body, but sizing and fit are very important. I know that if she comes in, puts it on and it doesn’t fit, she won’t come back. Clothes have to make a woman feel good, relaxed and sexy. We are going to be constantly looking at fine-tuning the fit and we’ll get it right.”

But Sears is going against the grain by tapping the 40-year-old rapper. Retailers seem to be launching celebrity lines as quickly as they’re marking down in these tough economic circumstances, but most lately have been signing younger, fresher faces ? Avril Lavigne will soon launch at Kohl’s and Rachel Bilson is doing a line for DKNY Jeans.

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