Stories of Substance: Body Image Round-Up

This story both angers me and breaks my heart—a father in Ottawa may lose custody of his kids because of his weight. And this is after he lost 150 lbs. With all of these lousy, screwed up parents out there (both moms and dads), it horrifies me that this is what they are fixating on. Screwed up priorities.

According to the American Bar Association Journal, gaining weight is a hazard of those in the legal profession. It’s all the long hours, plus sitting all the time, and stress-related eating. I hear them. Welcome to my world-it’s an ongoing struggle. Anyone working long hours in stressful environments can relate. People like to say weight gain is caused by laziness, but they forget it can be caused by overwork, among a multitude of other things. Don’t be so quick to judge.

Are you overtired? Yawning and drinking a lot of coffee during the day? Some brilliant scientists came out with this study concluding that it’s your own fault. If you weren’t so damn fat and depressed, you’d be more alert and bright-eyed. Yeah right. Maybe the scientists need to spend some time in the law offices the ABA mentioned.

It was Full Figured Fashion Week this week here in New York City. Such an important and wonderful event. I’m working like crazy so I couldn’t make it unfortunately. Last year I had a great time. Hope everyone who went enjoyed themselves!

Eating disorders aren’t just for the young. New research shows that eating disorders in older women is on the rise.

Read anything interesting lately? Feel free to share.

Interview With Plus Size Model Sara Alloy-Part 2

Photographer Roberto Ligresti, Makeup Rene Court

I’m back with the smart and beautiful plus size model Sara Alloy, who was nice enough to talk to me about modeling, body image and all sorts of things. Without further ado…..

Let’s talk a bit more about the plus size modeling industry. What advice do you give to aspiring models?

If somebody writes to me, I say I’m not an agent, and it’s completely subjective so it’s hard for to say. I could say “you’re beautiful” and they could go to an agency and get turned down, so my opinion is only worth so much. I ask them how tall they are and what their measurements are and let them know the basic requirements. If they’re 5’9″, that’s a great starting point. Next I say that it’s important how proportionate you are. The taller you are the bigger you can be. So if you’re 5’11” being a size 16 or 18 is more acceptable. If you’re 5’8″ or 5’9″  they want you to be a 12 or a 14. I tell them examples of the type of work I’ve done and expect to do. A lot of them get the wrong idea from shows like America’s Next Top Model as to what you can do.

Where do you tell them the most opportunities are?

Mostly print and web work, some editorials. There are very few runway shows for us these days, which is why Full Figured Fashion Week is so great.

I went to Full Figured Fashion Week and one of the retailers there was talking about how they would use smaller size women and then pin the clothing in the back to make it look like it fits. Have you seen that?

Absolutely. They want to show the clothes as fitting who will be wearing the clothes. Sometimes they can’t get a sample that will fit the model, so they will pin the clothes. I don’t think pinning is as controversial as padding to size up.

Women at Full Figured Fashion Week said that they had done research and plus size consumers don’t want to see plus size models that look like them. Instead they want to see smaller models that give them something to aspire towards. Would you like to comment on that?

I think most women idealize a slightly smaller size, whether or not they admit it. I might be a size 14, but often times I’m shopping where the models are much smaller. Naturally you envision yourself reflecting what you see in the advertising. I’m putting on my advertising hat when I’m speaking like this, but honestly, what they are doing is good marketing. You are ultimately selling people a dream. Even if you are comfortable with who you are, it’s so drilled into our heads that we should be thinner than we are that when you go shopping you automatically look at a mannequin or model and see yourself reflected in whatever advertising you’re looking at.

So do you think that a size 20 wants to see a size 20 or that a size 20 would rather see a size 16 or 18?

They say they want to see a size 20 but honestly every time they try to use a size 20 or other bigger sizes they don’t sell the clothes. If a company books a size 18 model and the clothes aren’t selling, they aren’t going to book the model again. I’d like to see more diverse models used, but the retailers aren’t going to respond to what customers say, they’re going to respond to what their sales say. As consumers we all need to be better about voting with our dollars.

What do you think would change that?

I think the shoot Steven Meisel did for Vogue Italia was very helpful. Rosie Mercado who was the face of Full Figured Fashion Week 2 years ago, she’s larger but she’s so beautiful. She’s tall and carries herself with such confidence that clothes look great on her. They could use someone like her, and have Steven Meisel shoot her and put her in a high fashion spread and show that ideal of beauty.

Do you think the change will come from retailers or designers or consumers improving their body image so they want to see models that look like them or a combination?

I think it’s a combination because on the one hand you have imagery drilled in our heads from the time we are little girls, you’re seeing the actresses on TV from  the time you start watching it, you’re seeing them in magazines, you are being told everywhere that you need to be a certain way. So that is a problem, that girls are being bombarded. We’re conditioned to think that skinny is beautiful.

On top of that designers don’t cut clothes for bigger girls. Agents won’t book bigger girls so it seems as if they feel it’s a waste of time to put bigger girls on their boards. So there are no bigger girls to shoot campaigns should they decide to use bigger girls. It’s a cyclical thing. Continue reading

Curvy Models’ New Body-Friendly Business

I had the pleasure of meeting Shannon Hiett and Griselangel Paula, two smart and dynamic plus size models at the 2011 Full Figured Fashion Week’s Curves in the City Shopping Soiree. Shannon and Griselangel have combined their business acumen with their dedication to create CustomPLUS, an online customized clothing company.

Shannon Hiett and Griselangel Paula

Shannon has been involved in the plus community for three years as a fit model, informal model and print model with various clients, including Destination Maternity, David’s Bridal, Macy’s, Bloomingdale’s, Daphne Larger Sizes, SwimsuitsForAll.com, Tru Diva Designs, and many more.

Shannon met Griselangel during Queens Fashion Week and a fast friendship formed. Griselangel has modeled for numerous companies and designers such as Kmart, Plus Model Magazine, Rocawear, Baby Phat, Beyonce’s House of Dereon, Biflex and Applebottoms amongst many others. Griselangel is represented internationally throughout Africa, and North America.

The Figure-Flattering Clothes of CustomPLUS

Shannon and Griselangel created CustomPLUS in early 2011 after discussing their frustration with the lack of customizable plus size garments that didn’t cost more than straight size garments. They also wanted to create a business that coincided with their passion for the plus size industry. Because they are fuller figured women, they know how garments should fit and that style is a must. CustomPLUS garments are of substantial quality, figure flattering and can be worn daily!

CustomPLUS-A Fair and Forwarding-Thinking Business Model

The ingenuity of CustomPLUS is not simply its quality, well-made clothing with wide customization options. I was impressed by the equality in its(reasonable) pricing. As I have previously stated, a challenge and problem for plus size consumers is having to pay higher prices than straight size counterparts for the exact same clothing. At CustomPLUS, there is one price for each item, size notwithstanding. Continue reading

The Pulse of the Plus Size Community

 

During Full Figured Fashion Week, I attended the Pulse of the Plus Size Community Panel, which discussed the challenges, trends and future of the plus size community. It was hosted by comedienne Erica Watson. Panelists were Jill Hutchison, Publisher and General Manager for Sonsi.com, Katheryn Finney, founder of the TheBudgetFashionista.com and CEO of TBF Group, LLC, Madeline Figueroa-Jones, editor of PLUS Model Magazine, Jennene Biggins, Founder and CEO of Voluptuous Woman Company, and Leslie Medlik, who works for Re/Dress NYC.

The “Plus Size” Label

The definition of “plus size” is a fluid one. Some designers consider anything over a 10 or a 12 to be plus sized. Considering the “average sized” woman in the United States is a size 14, this label is misleading. Jill Hutchinson said she gets asked all the time “am I plus size”? She stressed that “plus size” is wrongfully given a negative connotation, and that you are what you are regardless of the label put on it.

The panel had a variety of opinions as to the labels put on the “plus size” woman. Leslie Medlik‘s opinion was not to sugarcoat it, a plus size woman is “fat” and women should take back the word proudly. Erica Watson too had problems with euphemisms, noting that a “curve” is often a “fat roll” and that there’s nothing wrong with that. Jill Hutchinson preferred to focus on terms that will make a woman comfortable with herself.  Madeline Figueroa-Jones stressed the community should be focusing on the real issues rather than words.

Too often people get so bogged down in nitpicking over words that the substance gets lost. While I believe in “telling it like it is,” I don’t see any benefit in trying to “take back” a word with negative connotations. Many weight-acceptance activists who do great work and have wisdom to impart call what they do “fat acceptance.” While I appreciate how they bring attention to important issues, personally I’d rather see derogatory terms and slurs eliminated rather than “redefined.”

Plus Size Models

Plus size designers frequently fail to use models that look like the female customers who will ultimately be wearing the clothes. Madeline Figueroa Jones asked a manufacturer why it didn’t use plus size models of color. The manufacturer’s response? Customers don’t respond to “bigger, darker” models. Their research was based on a study they did in 1998.

A woman from Catherine’s was in the audience. She asked her employer why they don’t use models truer to their customers’ body types. Catherine’s told her they conducted a study and determined customers wanted smaller size models that they could aspire to be like. The size of this focus group panel? Only 25 women.

Charging More for the Same Thing

Retailers often charge more for plus size offerings that are exactly the same as their regular size counterparts. Katheryn Finney listed the litany of excuses retailers give: pattern changes, different models required (which they often aren’t even using), more fabric, and less volume in sales. She stated that the solution is to “support those who support us.”

The woman from Catherine’s noted that Catherine’s charges more for their larger plus sizes. Ironically, Catherine’s sells more of these larger, more expensive clothes than the smaller plus sizes.

Considering the large number of plus size women in the United States, the excuse that there is no clothing market for them is a feeble one. A woman who works for Fashion Bug stressed that the buying power is definitely there. The problem is that manufacturers make unattractive, ill-fitting plus size clothes. Understandably, women don’t buy them.

Stefanie Cunningham of La’Grace International, who is launching a plus size bra line in Fall 2011 put it eloquently: “Bras are supposed to support, lift and fit, not bankrupt you.”

Katheryn Finney opined that success in high-end fashion offerings has a trickle-down effect to lower-priced offerings, and encouraged the audience to support high-end independent plus size designers. The panel as a whole noted that designers and retailers should work together to make plus size clothing more readily available and economically viable. Continue reading

Ming Wang Knits-Quality Investment Clothing

 

While at the 2011 Full Figured Fashion Week’s Curves in the City Shopping Soiree, I found myself immediately gravitating to the jewel tones and beautiful prints of Ming Wang’s high end, activewear knits collection. As I examined the clothing on the racks, I was struck at how substantial and well-made their apparel was, in a versatile variety of lengths.  Ming Wang’s designers clearly know a women’s body. Their patterns, aside from their beauty, are intelligently designed to complement a woman’s figure.  For example, I love this black jacket (see above) from the Fall 2011 collection. Its vertical stripes elongate the body, while curved stripes on the upper torso draw the eye upward, flattering the shoulders. Next, I admired a black skirt that would enhance and skim the body’s curves without clinging. Ming Wang’s built-in slenderizer made of spandex in their pants allows for a sleek and comfortable fit.

I had the pleasure of interviewing Carolyn Wang, Merchandising Director of Ming Wang, who works out of their Dallas, Texas headquarters. Her mother-in-law, Ming Wang, emigrated from Taiwan to the United States in 1979, attended FIT, and designed for Adolfo, Lilli Ann, and Richtone New York before starting her own clothing lines. Carolyn herself is an FIT graduate, who worked as a designer for Ming Wang for four years before switching over to her current position.

Carolyn became committed not only to clothing design, but to designing for the fuller-figured woman when she was only fourteen years old. She grew up in an upstate New York blue-collar neighborhood, where her mother, who loved to sew, taught Carolyn to sew herself. When Carolyn’s cousin was getting married, Carolyn helped her mother shop for a dress for the wedding. Frustrated at the limited upstate New York offerings, Carolyn and her mother travelled to New York City to find a dress. Even in New York City, they had a horrible experience trying to find something that fit. Carolyn has designed clothing for her mother since then (lucky woman!). Continue reading

NYC Full Figured Fashion Week Is On Its Way!

2011 Full Figured Fashion Week is coming to New York City this week and I can’t wait!  Check out their website for a list of events. The events include a shopping soiree, panel on the pulse of the plus size community, and a runway fashion show.  Above is a picture of a beautiful dress from Igigi, who won best plus size fashion retailer at the 2010 Full Figured Fashion Week.

There is a dearth of fashion-forward plus size clothes out there. Designers who offer plus size clothing lines are in the minority. Retailers who used to offer plus size lines have discontinued their lines or shut down shop entirely. Other retailers offer smaller selections than  those for their “regular” sizes or offer their plus sized offerings exclusively online.

Much of the plus sized clothing out there is both unattractive and poor quality. Here are some examples after the jump: Continue reading

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