Beyond the Birds & the Bees

Plus-Size Models: Fad or the Future of Fashion?

Tara Lynn on French Elle Cover

It seems to be a fad: featuring plus-size models in fashion magazines. Just look at Vogue Curvy on Vogue Italia’s Web site or American Vogue’s “Shape Issue,” which hits newsstands this month. French Elle has also joined in, by featuring American plus-size model Tara Lynn on the cover and in over twenty pages inside the April issue.

And while this is a step in the right direction, maybe the issue of having only stick-thin women admired as beautiful isn’t being addressed in quite the right way. After all, when an issue of a magazine is dedicated to women marked as larger than the average model, aren’t we again only paying attention to weight and presenting this one plus-size model as an exception to the skinny ideal?

And yes, featuring plus-size models in fashion magazines is a baby step toward including plus-size (or maybe more accurately called average-size, as most of these models are not extremely overweight) models into a traditionally skinny industry. Maybe this is an indicator of good things to comea time when plus-size and traditionally ultra-thin models are included in fashion spreads together and made to be beautiful alongside each other without any hype over who weighs how much.

-Taylor McCabe, 17, Staff Writer


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2 Responses to “Plus-Size Models: Fad or the Future of Fashion?”

  1. Bi&Excepted Says:

    This could go in two directions. We could stop focusing on size-idealism so much, OR we could end up with an obsession on being “thick” and looking like a “real woman”. Which would be what we have now only with different expectations.

  2. Shassowhawk Says:

    I agree. This subject can go two ways. Personally I think that for modelling agencys size should not matter. They should have an even balances of all sizes. For everyone is beautiful in there own way right? It would also help the magazines advertize new clothing saying “It doesn’t just look good on paper thin people”. It would increase sales, make new job opportunities, and help stop anorexia, bolemia, and other eating disorders now that they feel they don’t have to look like that to look good.

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