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Thursday, July 1, 2021

Size celebration bears Fruit

In response to a recent discussion about the encouraging trend towards using genuinely full-figured models in plus-size fashion advertising, a reader sent us the following comment

I wish I could agree that companies are starting to use larger models, but as far as I can tell, in most cases, and especially in swimwear and lingerie, they're still looking for models who either don't look plus at all, or if they have any plus features, the models are posed to make those features invisible. They're still trying to make the models look as thin as possible, and that really annoys me.

This reader's frustration is understandable, and one could cite many examples of companies that still adopt the faux-plus approach, with its underlying implication that being full-figured is not compatible with being beautiful.


But we are pleased to say that there are signs of progress.


To illustrate this point, readers will hopefully forgive us for posting several images that are just a tad . . . revealing. We truly agonized over this post, and if it offends anyone's modesty, it will be removed immediately. But we wanted to give readers an opportunity to see that curves are no detriment whatsoever to beauty--that in fact, they can enhance it. And if anyone follows up on Dr. Claire Wiseman's groundbreaking 2003 study--which revealed that images of plus-size models do improve women's self-esteem--then hopefully these images will prove useful.


* * *

Of all company brands, "Fruit of the Loom" may be the last name that anyone would associate with the notion of "feminine beauty." But the fact of the matter is that FOTL is currently producing some of the most size-positive images in the industry.


To promote its "Fit for Me" plus-size line, FOTL placed its arresting Valerie Lefkowitz ad in countless publications, including Glamour, Marie Claire, Grace and Figure. And now, to adorn its product packaging, FOTL is duplicating the success of that celebrated promotion with ravishing images of the industry's two most popular models--Valerie and Barbara Brickner.













Posted here are several examples of Fruit's Barbara Brickner packaging. Instead of a causal, "lifestyle" approach, the company permitted the model to look all-out glamorous, with a "celebrity" hairstyle, and very animated expressions:













These images bear more than a passing resemblance to Mrs. Brickner's celebrated Mode lingerie editorial, which was a daring mix of sensuality and tastefulness, then as now.













Images such as these make it possible to envision what a truly size-positive media would look like. The fashion industry could retain its "aspirational" qualities--its craftsmanship and creativity, its professionalism and style--but would employ those talents to adorn the beauty of naturally curvaceous models, rather than androgynous waifs.























Whether it comes in the form of product packaging for women's clothing, or the cover of a Sports Illustrated swimwear issue, the media is a mirror before which women stand, every day of their lives. And it can either reflect an artificial standard that compels women to ruin their quality of life in its pursuit, or a healthy ideal based on natural femininity, which encourages women to make the most of the beauty that they already possess.



































Whether it comes in the form of product packaging for women's clothing, or the cover of a Sports Illustrated swimwear issue, the media is a mirror before which women stand, every day of their lives. And it can either reflect an artificial standard that compels women to ruin their quality of life in its pursuit, or a healthy ideal based on natural femininity, which encourages women to make the most of the beauty that they already possess.


































The tyranny of thinness still dominates our cultural landscape, but a growing number of companies are reintroducing the Classical ideal to the modern world. And long after that natural ideal is restored, people will look back upon this particular blip in time--a time when femininity briefly went "out of fashion"--and consider it . . . quite incomprehensible.






























































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