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

Fast Company · May 26, 2026, 10:30 AM · Also reported by 3 other sources

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

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