Culture #FatBabesInLuxury Is Trending. Here’s What It Means To Plus-Size Creators

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#FatBabesInLuxury Is Trending. Here’s What It Means To Plus-Size Creators​

ELIZA HUBER
JUNE 23, 2021 5:00 AM
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In April, Katie Sturino, the founder of beauty brand Megababe and author of Body Talk, and Nicolette Mason, a fashion blogger, were so fed up with luxury fashion’s long-practiced exclusion of anyone above a size 16 — that is, 67% of all women in the U.S. — that they decided to do something about it. For their collective 805,000 Instagram followers, the two launched a social media campaign, #FatBabesInLuxury. Their goal was to start a conversation around the lack of representation — and shoppable clothing options — in the luxury fashion space. Because while plus-size and size-inclusive lines are on the rise, representation in the highest echelons of fashion’s hierarchy remains few and far between.

For proof, see last year: While 2020 saw wins like Dutch model Jill Kortleve becoming the first plus-size model to walk in a Chanel fashion show in a decade and in Fendi's history (a title she shared with Paloma Elsesser), as well as Versace sending three curve models down its runway, overall, luxury brands have been slow to accept size inclusivity. According to The Fashion Spot, only 46 out of 6,879 models cast were plus-size for Fall 2020 and 34 (out of 2,293) for Spring 2021 during last year's Fashion Months.


“I love fancy bags, shoes, & clothes (when they're available in my size),” Sturino wrote on Instagram beneath an image of herself wearing a Lele Sadoughi headband and clutching a Chanel purse. “But it seems like season after season, we see brands like Dior, Louis Vuitton, Chanel working almost exclusively with thin models, influencers & ambassadors, which results in a strong message that plus bodies are NOT included in the vision of luxury.”
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Mason took to her own Instagram account. “I believe that representation, to an extent, can shift the way people view themselves — and each other,” she wrote in a concurrent post alongside pictures of her posing with a Louis Vuitton handbag and Miu Miu sunglasses. “That being seen & shown as beautiful, luxurious, worthy of investment — that that helps people see, appreciate, and believe in their own beauty. That they deserve. That they belong. That there is possibility.”


Both then called on their followers to flood the hashtag with images of themselves wearing whatever it is that they deem luxurious. The result? Almost 900 posts, many of which were accompanied by moving personal stories, as well as pleas for representation and inclusivity in designer fashion.
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“When I think of #FatBabesInLuxury, I think of access,” says fashion writer and creator Lydia Okello, who posted a photo of themself with body-positive slow-fashion activist Marielle Elizabeth using the hashtag. “I’ve worked in fashion for about 16 years, and I’ve seen the way that fat bodies have been left out.” Moving forward, Okello hopes to see luxury designers finally realize that bigger customers are no less deserving of high-end goods. “We have taste, personality, and style,” they say. According to Okello, being plus-size doesn’t change the underlying desires that keep the wheels of fashion in motion: “We want what everyone wants: to feel beautiful, special, and exciting in our clothes.”


“WE ARE SO OFTEN DENIED THE FINER THINGS IN LIFE, OR EXCLUDED FROM LUXURY, THAT WE HAVE TO MAKE A FREAKING HASHTAG TO CELEBRATE WHEN WE ARE ABLE TO.”
LYNLEY EILERS, PLUS-SIZE MODEL

Plus-size model Lynley Eilers agrees: “We want access to clothing, like everyone else; access to experiences, like everyone else,” she says. “It’s plain and simple: fat women want what everyone else has — we just want it in our size!” Unfortunately, according to her, fatphobia, as it stands today, is too deeply embedded into society — fashion especially. When one designer comes out with garments for larger customers, it’s cause for celebration — even though it should just be the status quo. “We are so often denied the finer things in life, or excluded from luxury, that we have to make a freaking hashtag to celebrate when we are able to,” Eilers says.


For influencers Essie Golden and Gregoria Reyes-Lou (Greivy), the hashtag has become an escape from the thousands of luxury ads they’re bombarded with each day, hardly any of which are representative of them or people who look like them. “#FatBabesInLuxury is the representation that I don't see in the media, but I do see in my everyday life,” Golden tells Refinery29. “I enjoy scrolling through that hashtag and seeing so many beautiful plus-size people looking incredible in their [luxury-to-them] pieces.” According to Greivy, it created a way for people like her to connect and share their love of style that’s elevated. “It’s for people who seek inspiration outside of what society claims a luxurious person should look like and be,” she says.
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#FatBabesInLuxury is about more than pressuring designers to make their pieces in larger sizes. It’s a movement geared at pushing the luxury space to include larger bodies in ad campaigns, shows, and editorials. “Our society and the industry doesn’t deem fat women worthy of the finer things,” Eilers says. And they won’t until people get used to seeing designer labels on a full range of bodies.


“Luxury fashion is selling a visual of someone who they believe is aspirational,” says Sturino, “but only in one form.” This campaign was meant to force luxury brands to see past their old definition of beauty and join the rest of the world. Sounding a brighter note, Sturino says the bulk of society has evolved and is, in many ways, very inclusive. Unfortunately, in the two months since she called on luxury brands to step up for plus-size shoppers, according to Sturino, not one has reached out to the activist to discuss opportunities for change.
 
I hope they don't expect it to be the same price as a size 16. Those pictures look like they require 2.5x the material for their fashion.
 
I hope they don't expect it to be the same price as a size 16. Those pictures look like they require 2.5x the material for their fashion.
They probably would because fat activists see getting charged for more because of more fabric needed for clothing as a “fat tax”. Probably one of the most entitled movements out there.
 
Jesus Christ, what a horror show. These lardasses are fucking disgusting.

"Fat" and "babe" are mutually exclusive terms, unless one is being old fashioned and quaint when talking about a human infant. As these are most assuredly *not* human infants, they are porkplanet women who should spare the world the sight of them and don le burqua trashbin. Or kill themselves by more direct means than mere morbid obesity and all its assorted issues.

"Fat acceptance" is a crock of shit that's nearly as cancerous as CRT. Its advocates all need to be euthanized, if only because brain bleach has yet to be perfected.
 
I really hate how deathfats have taken "plus-size" and completely butchered it. Just a reminder that plus sizes were never meant to include someone who is 400lbs and struggling to breathe. I'm not qualified to comment on the fashion industry, but I'm going to get sperg-y. Here are some actual plus size models:

Ashley-Graham-Plus-Size-Fashion-Model.jpg
Ashley Graham
Kate-Dillon-Plus-Size-Fashion-Model.jpg
Kate Dillon
LizzieMiller.jpg
Lizzie Miler

Maybe they're not your cup of tea, but guess what they can do? Walk. Fit into cars and on planes. Change clothes without getting exhausted. Be recognized as humans by their shape and therefore wear fashionable clothes. Straight women like to see attractive women. Fat women and fat men like to see attractive women. Even gay men like to see attractive women. Plus size models, like the ones seen above, are mindful of what they eat and have workout routines to keep what is considered an attractive silhouette for a plus size body type. Of course, this doesn't line up with the beauty standards of super fats like Tess who like to eat entire cakes by themselves then cry MuH BuLiMiA.

You know what no one with a scrap of sanity wants to see? A woman with so much upper arm fat that it's starting to stack up on itself. A gunt as wide as a refrigerator. Someone that's been so fat for so long that their feet have become deformed from carrying the weight.

#FatBabesInLuxury is about more than pressuring designers to make their pieces in larger sizes. It’s a movement geared at pushing the luxury space to include larger bodies in ad campaigns, shows, and editorials.
Lol they can piss off with this. This is only about making designers cave and cater to 5X fatties. These women are addicted to consuming food and consoomerism. They're not getting that XXXXXL Chanel dress so they can wear it once, destroy the seams, then banish it to a landfill, and their deep fried brains can't handle that. Also, there's literally no way to make a classy silhouetted outfit for someone who has eaten themselves to the point that they look like a lard ball. It's clothes, not magic.

Unfortunately, in the two months since she called on luxury brands to step up for plus-size shoppers, according to Sturino, not one has reached out to the activist to discuss opportunities for change.
That's hilarious. :story: No self-respecting designer would ever want their work turned into a circus tent.
 
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Unfortunately, according to her, fatphobia, as it stands today, is too deeply embedded into society

Fat retards on twitter: Capitalism is bad and I'm about worker rights and fighting nonstop greed.

Also fat retards: You don't get it, I'm FAT because I'm too poor to avoid healthy food. It's not from lack of will power, lack of exercise, a privileged lazy life or absurd levels of gluttony!

Lol fat people are the most fucking brain dead leeches in society.
 
If you need a walmart scooter and the fabric required to clothe you is equal to drapery, you have created a problem for yourself, the rest of the world does not need to accommodate your shit decisions.
 
I really hate how deathfats have taken "plus-size" and completely butchered it. Just a reminder that plus sizes were never meant to include someone who is 400lbs and struggling to breathe. I'm not qualified to comment on the fashion industry, but I'm going to get sperg-y. Here are some actual plus size models:

View attachment 2288114
Ashley Graham
View attachment 2288115
Kate Dillon
View attachment 2288116
Lizzie Miler

Maybe they're not your cup of tea, but guess what they can do? Walk. Fit into cars and on planes. Change clothes without getting exhausted. Be recognized as humans by their shape and therefore wear fashionable clothes. Straight women like to see attractive women. Fat women and fat men like to see attractive women. Even gay men like to see attractive women. Plus size models, like the ones seen above, are mindful of what they eat and have workout routines to keep what is considered an attractive silhouette for a plus size body type. Of course, this doesn't line up with the beauty standards of super fats like Tess who like to eat entire cakes by themselves then cry MuH BuLiMiA.

You know what no one with a scrap of sanity wants to see? A woman with so much upper arm fat that it's starting to stack up on itself. A gunt as wide as a refrigerator. Someone that's been so fat for so long that their feet have become deformed from carrying the weight.


Lol they can piss off with this. This is only about making designers cave and cater to 5X fatties. These women are addicted to consuming food and consoomerism. They're not getting that XXXXXL Chanel dress so they can wear it once, destroy the seams, then banish it to a landfill, and their deep fried brains can't handle that. Also, there's literally no way to make a classy silhouetted outfit for someone who has eaten themselves to the point that they look like a lard ball. It's clothes, not magic.


That's hilarious. :story: No self-respecting designer would ever want their work turned into a circus tent.
These ladies just have natural frames a little larger than what's considered average in the industry. Not really fat at all. The reason the fashion industry and literally everything else has excluded 400lb+ people for so long is because they have a sickness, and they need help. It's called diet and exercise. Maybe surgery if things are extreme and time is of the essence. Once you're over your sickness you can go back and join society in everything they do.

Supporting deathfats in any way that doesn't encourage diet and exercise isn't responsible or healthy. Why is it people complain that having obese pets is irresponsible and abusive, yet if someone does the same to their own body it isn't considered the same?
 
These ladies just have natural frames a little larger than what's considered average in the industry.
Indeed. What deathfats don't like to talk about is that the problem is that once you reached deathfat status, your body has a weird and rather unique shape. With plus-size models you can take the fit of a garment and size it up and perhaps alter it a little in some places, like the bust. Deathfats have so many weird fat deposits and fat rolls in different places it's impossible to make anything that would fit most of them off the rack. So it's not just a question of fabric, you have to literally design the dress around the deathfat.
 
Indeed. What deathfats don't like to talk about is that the problem is that once you reached deathfat status, your body has a weird and rather unique shape. With plus-size models you can take the fit of a garment and size it up and perhaps alter it a little in some places, like the bust. Deathfats have so many weird fat deposits and fat rolls in different places it's impossible to make anything that would fit most of them off the rack. So it's not just a question of fabric, you have to literally design the dress around the deathfat.
I'm just going to slap some Louis V, Chanel, and Hermes stickers on a tarp, then I'll charge some porker 5,000 dollars to use it as wearable circus tent. Problem solved
 
AHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHA This shit literally makes me laugh so hard.

Fat people modeling clothes is the best joke reality has brought me. thank you. They're wearing fucking bed sheets with no shape.
 
I hope they don't expect it to be the same price as a size 16. Those pictures look like they require 2.5x the material for their fashion.
To be fair all these luxury items are made by sweatshops (aka slave labor) in some south Asian country where the employees get paid pennys per day. Most of the money this companies expend is in advertising and Fat models are probably cheaper.

Same with the Soda at fast food restaurants, it doesn't matter if you get a medium for a $1 or a giant Super Glup for $3.79. To the restaurant is just less than 5 cents worth of sugary syrup mixed with water, their main expense is probably the cup.
 
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