By NICKY CHAMP
“Modelling to me isn’t just about being good-looking or having a lot of fun and being really really good-looking”And same goes for Crystal Renn.
The 26-year-old model is calling for sample sizes to be made bigger; speaking out at a panel, Inside the Modeling Industry: A Conversation About Health and Beauty in Fashion, as part of National Eating Disorders Awareness Week in New York.
Onya Crystal.
Renn believes that designers should change from the standard U.S. size zero or 2 (Australian size 4 or 6) to a U.S. size 8 (Australian size 12).
“By having a size 8 sample, you are giving freedom to a designer,” she said. “Most of the models are going to be size 6s and 8s, and you could have 10s, and if a really amazing model walked in who was a size 0, you would tailor the dress down to her.”
Renn has (unsurprisingly) struggled with eating disorders in the past after being told to lose 10 inches off her waist and to look to Vogue magazine for inspiration by the model scout who initially signed her. In her book, Hungry, she reveals the pressure to conform to the industry’s impossible standards led her weight to spiral down to a frightening 43 kilos.
Given the disturbing revelations from ex-Vogue Australia editor, Kirstie Clements, about fit models eating tissues and regularly fainting from hunger in order to fit the size zero mould, I’m wondering just who is the chicken and who is the egg in the fashion industry.
Or in other words: who is driving models to starve themselves? Is it the fashion designers or is the modelling industry?
Top Comments
Serious question, does the average woman feel the body of someone like Robyn Lawley is more attainable? I mean, I personally look at her body and think, wow, I don't know many women whose curves are that even (e.g. huge boobs, noticeably smaller waste, big hips - the classic hourglass), or someone whose thighs are as smooth and cellulite free as Marquita's or Laura Wells (yes, I know they've been photoshopped). Seriously I don't really feel like they represent the "real" woman either.
And aside from that, WTF is a "real" woman anyway? Surely women of all shapes and sizes are "real"? I would love to see Vogue fill its pages with ALL types of women. Not just lean models, not just plus size, but a mix of all types of women. After all there is not one "right" shape, we are all beautifully unique!
It's the top designers that are the culprit of this. You see the super skinny models on the catwalk at fashion shows and in high fashion magazines.
As someone said below, the sample size for most fashion brands is a ten. And we are not seeing starving then women in the KMart catalogue or Sunny Girl or Dotti or Zara or Sportsgirl. They are normal slender models in those ads.
So therefore, boycott fashion magazines.