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Posts Tagged ‘plus size model’

Crystal Renn’s Plus Size To-do

July 15th, 2010 by Catherine | 3 Comments | Filed in Plus Size Fashion

So, unless you have been under a rock for the past week or so you have heard about, and probably seen, the latest pictures of plus size model Crystal Renn.  If you haven’t – here they are.

Crystal Renn Fashion for Passion

Crystal Renn Fashion for Passion

She does look noticeably skinnier in these pictures.  Check out this image from V Magazine, she looks significantly curvier here.

Crystal Renn V Magazine

Crystal Renn V Magazine

So, the big controversy is “is Crystal still a plus size model?”  “Is she relapsing into anorexia?”  “Is she turning her back on her plus size fans?”

While I am pretty sure her weight gain/loss is really none of our business, she sat down with Glamour Magazine to discuss body image, the blatant photoshopping and more.  Check out these un-edited images from the same shoot.  Wow!!  She looks amazing AND like her normal, curvier self!!

Crystal Renn Un-Photoshopped

Crystal Renn Un-Photoshopped

I recommend clicking over to Glamour and checking out the interview.  It says a lot about this industry.    Here is a little snippet from the interview:

Readers of Glamour know Crystal and her story well: her years of anorexia, her return to good health—and her fame and success as a “plus-size” model. We love Crystal and put her on the cover two months ago. So when I saw headlines cropping up last week criticizing her for losing weight (“A Big Fat Lie?” read one, in the New York Post), I felt for her. But frankly, when I saw the pictures they referred to, I was also worried. She’d already been slimmer when we photographed her for the cover than she had been four months earlier (read about that here), but last week, in those photos, she looked slimmer still. Women were concerned. “I just genuinely wonder if she is becoming ill again,” posted one commenter on jezebel.com. “Eating disorders are hard to get over.”

In the heat of all this, Crystal stopped by the office to talk. First (and best) things first: She’s NOT as skinny as she looks in those pictures; she looks like a healthy, average-size young woman. But she was upset. So what’s the deal?

GLAMOUR: Let’s talk about the pictures that ran of you last week. You look thinner than we’re used to seeing. But you say that when you saw those photos yourself, you gasped. Why?

CRYSTAL RENN: Well, I was shocked. When I saw the pictures, I think I was silent for a good five minutes, staring with my mouth open. I don’t know what was done to those photos or who did it, but they look retouched to me. And listen, everybody retouches, but don’t make me into something I’m not. [Reached for comment, photographer Nicholas Routzen explained that Crystal looks the way she does because the photos were “…taken from a higher angle with a wider lens.” But he also added, “I shaped her…I did nothing that I wouldn’t do to anyone. I’m paid to make women look beautiful.”]…

CRYSTAL RENN: I’m the healthiest I’ve ever been. You know, I just started introducing exercise back in my life—it took me seven years to be ready to go back to the gym because I exercised in such an extreme way during my eating disorder. I’m hiking and doing yoga, and it’s very light, but I feel fantastic. I’m sure some people might say, “Why are you exercising? Go eat a cheeseburger!” but I couldn’t be more proud of myself.

But even so, I’m a size 10. I’m 5’9”, so it might look different on me than if I were 5’2”, but everyone’s a different size 10. And I’m about 50-55 pounds heavier than my lowest weight as a straight-size model. Back then, you could see ribs everywhere. My legs, not only did they not touch, I mean there was nothing to grab. It was just skin and bone. And that goes for my arms as well. Thank God I don’t look anything like that now.

GLAMOUR: You told me that your worry was that girls would look at those thin-looking pictures of you and think that you were glamorizing extreme skinniness.

CRYSTAL RENN: Yes. That was a huge fear for me. I thought, “People are going to think that I’m sick—and maybe a girl who’s suffering from an eating disorder sees a picture like this and gives up hope.” People who have followed my story and heard my voice might think I’ve turned my back on that, and that it’s only beautiful to be thin. They’re not going to know where I stand right now, and I understand that. Because if I were in their shoes looking at this picture, I would be disturbed. I would absolutely be disturbed.

GLAMOUR: What would your message be, then, to that girl looking at this picture?

CRYSTAL RENN: I would tell her: I don’t look like that. I absolutely do believe in beauty at every size. And I’d tell her you can’t look at every image you see in this industry and say, “That’s exactly how that person looks,” because they don’t necessarily look like that. I mean, there is extreme retouching. There is amazing, very expensive clothing that is cut just right to flatter the body. People have trainers and go to great lengths for their bodies. And for that girl who’s thinking she has to be so thin to be accepted? You don’t. It’s not true. I starved myself to be successful, when in fact my real success only came when I became more confident.

Click here to check out more plus size models at LaGrandeDame.com :)

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Leona Palmer: Modeling Today: Fat vs. Skinny

April 27th, 2010 by Catherine | 1 Comment | Filed in Plus Size Fashion, beauty

Modeling Today: Fat vs. Skinny

Reposted from Huffington Post

Curvy assets in mainstream media have just set off another round of debate and controversy. Plus models, skinny models: what happened to just straight up models who are beautiful? We long for the golden days of the Supermodel. I grew up with Cindy, Christy (Turlington and Brinkley), Naomi, Linda and Elle. A few years ago when Vogue featured some of those familiar faces on the cover, people in fashion swooned with a bittersweet nostalgia. Gorgeous women with gorgeous bodies who were celebrities in their own right. These are the women I thought of when, six years ago, a photographer mistook me for a plus model he’d recently worked with and suggested that I submit some photos to an agency. I had never heard of plus and was skeptical that my face and those faces, or more specifically my body and their bodies had any business falling together under the label of ‘Model.’ I was wrong.

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The blogger
When I entered the industry it was obvious that those supermodel days were over. Instead there was an ever-turning machinery that churned out ever-younger, ever-thinner anonymous lineups that briefly fit standardized measurements. It’s not just the supermodel that’s dead, but also the career model. The exception being catalog models aging well enough to transition steadily through the commercial divisions until they arrive at the “sophisticated.”

Modeling, as an act of employment to sell goods, is a by-product of capitalism, the industrial revolution, and the rise of American commercial life. At first there were drawings, echoing the up-do and heavy bosom of the Gibson Girls, then full color illustrations of full-bodied, rosy-cheeked American ideals. In the post-war era, young women of a certain class and race could have their go at modeling for a time until they married or had children. They were not supporting themselves with this income, it would have been considered debasing or licentious to do so, smacking too much of that other bodily profession.

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But as the decade wore on Vogue covers gained popularity and something shifted. Women were entering the workforce en masse and contemplating larger liberations. Enter Twiggy. The era of the Supermodel was dawning. Her body fluctuated with our standards of beauty. Sometimes we wanted her super thin, sometimes we wanted her super sensuous but always we wanted her super beautiful. Casting our notions and desires onto that body, always asking what her hip and bust measurements say about us at large, from our Jane Fonda aerobics to our heroin chic. Supermodels were represented the most desired female ideal for both men and women. Something that, in order to sell issues and products, was an aspiration worth striving for because on some level you felt it was accessible or identified with it. These were women, young but adult, beautiful but well-spoken. With ideas, opinions, and experiences that we wanted to know. Not just supermodels but role models to some extent.

Some crossed over into mainstream media, branding themselves, acting in film or appearing on television. But things were shifting again. We went Kate Moss and we never went back: the bony, androgynous silhouette ruled. At the same time film was giving up its ghost to digital. While photographs are always an illusion of lighting, makeup, hair, and styling, suddenly it was possible to drastically alter the body itself. Re-touching on film was prohibitive in both cost and time. So the models had to be great: great hair, great skin (read great nutrition and fitness), great movement and confidence (read maturity). Sample sizes were a size 6 and 8 for a reason. Today, each and every image is altered in post-production to better fit the aesthetic ideal, using one head on another body, smoothing over all “imperfections.” More like painting than photography, the body is negotiable. Finally, movie stars dominated the cover of magazines and campaigns–the new ideal, in body, fashion, and lifestyle. We see them in films, read their interviews in print, follow their trials in tabloids, and identify with them personally.

And so the new model: amazingly young, predominately eastern European, incredibly thin. Alienating and anonymous to the general population, they are interchangeable bodies at 5′9″, 30-23-30. So we debate about the health of these girls–sometimes 13 or 14 years old, and eating disorders, and media responsibility, and our impressionable young women. All arising from the expectation that models be little more than hangers for the clothes they display. This has been the longest span of fashion history enthralled to one severe ideal.

Then we sigh over the death of the Supermodel. With perhaps only Giselle waving the contemporary banner, followed by a few other Victoria Secret models recognizable by face but not name to the public. These ladies walked Prada’s runway last season, celebrated for their slightly curvier frames, while Marc Jacobs put Laetitia Casta and Elle Macpherson back on the Vuitton runway, craving bigger personalities to fill out the label. These are notable because they are exceptions.

The pendulum is stuck at waif, so we’ve created an opposite alternative in “plus” modeling. A response to the consumer whose own average size has settled at a 14 and beyond. The logic goes, if a size 0 sells to a size 8 or 10, then a size 12 should sell to a size 18 or 20. But then what does a “plus” model signify? If we range in size from 8 to 14, we actually represent not just the average woman, but the upper end of the old model sizes as well.

I have been consistently impressed with the devoted followers of plus modeling. Some of our ranks have gained something akin to celebrity status. Crystal Renn and Kate Dillon are incredibly popular to people looking for not just an alternative body type, but for a personality and a role model. In general we enter the industry post-adolescence, have a longer career span, and a voice–a throwback to the glory days. But as the “alternative” we are politicized to an extent and try to represent, from inside the industry, all those who fall outside the extreme standards of fashion modeling today.

It seems obvious at this point that the modeling industry, and the fashion industry at large, has developed a sort of personality disorder trying to be all things to all consumers and all advertisers while losing its center–the beautiful woman–in the process. The woman who inspires our ideal: beauty of body, mind, and spirit.

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Fashion Industry Pretends To Care About Plus-Size Models

April 21st, 2010 by Catherine | No Comments | Filed in Plus Size Fashion

This brief from The Onion made me laugh out loud…do you think Vogue is serious about embracing curvier bodies or is it just a publicity stunt?

April 24, 2002 | ISSUE 38•15

NEW YORK— In a pretend show of support for larger women, the May issue of Vogue features a 16-page spread focusing on plus-size models. “These plus-size beauties are every bit as gorgeous as the models you usually see in magazines,” said Vogue editor Anna Wintour, who has never before and will never again publish photos of normal-sized women. “Female beauty comes in many shapes and sizes, and this spread is a celebration of that fact.” Vogue’s June issue is slated to celebrate female boniness, featuring hundreds of photos of women weighing no more than 103 pounds.

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Beauty Can’t Be Measured Merely By Your Dress Size

January 27th, 2010 by Catherine | No Comments | Filed in Plus Size Fashion
I am re-posting this The Fashionable Housewife’s post in it’s entirety because I think it is important enough for every woman to read.  Please pop over there and comment.  Enjoy!
Posted By: Sarah Polyakov on January 23, 2010 at 9:00 am
  • Authors

    Catherine Wood Hill:
    Co-founder of La Grande Dame, Chief Blogger.
    Michelle Wood:
    Co-founder of La Grande Dame, Blogger.
    Tiffany Vesterman:
    Contributing Blogger.