Super Skinny Models: This Is What The Fashion Industry Calls "Curves"? (SLIDESHOW)

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Huffington Post
First Posted: 09-14-08 09:49 AM   |   Updated: 10-15-08 05:12 AM

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Some members of the fashion industry were patting themselves on the back last week with claims that there were more "curves and smiles" on the Fashion Week runways this year. (See AP article below.) We beg to differ. What we saw on the runways was more of the same: women so thin they not only made us gasp in disbelief, but also made us forget to look at the clothes (which can't be good for business). Here are a few of the ultra-thin girls the top designers dressed this season, and because it's the designer who should be taken to task for promoting these dangerous standards, we cropped the heads out of these images to protect the models' identities. Some of them are barely 14 years old, after all. - Huffington Post Style


By Megan K. Scott for Associated Press:
NEW YORK — If model thin is always in, at least there were fewer protruding collar bones and ribs to be counted at New York Fashion Week.

Models were up to sizes 2 and 4 _ not 0, according to Nian Fish, chair of a fashion designers health initiative. Designers rejected prepubescent 13-year-olds. And at least one super-thin model who had the audience talking a few seasons ago was noticeably absent.

"I think a lot of the direction from the designers has been a much healthier approach," said James Aguiar, co-host of Ultra HD's "Full Frontal Fashion," who noticed more curves and smiles on the runway.

Avril Graham, executive fashion and beauty editor at Harper's Bazaar, also saw a healthier look and more diversity: "We're obviously going through a season of a less cookie cutter look."

That is a small relief to those who have brought attention to the cause of eating disorders in the fashion world, though many say there's a long way to go.

"I saw a few that looked better," said Finola Hughes, host of "How Do I Look?" on the Style Network. "I actually saw some breasts, which was great. But there was one show I went to and everyone looked really skinny."

The question of how thin is too thin has been tossed around since Kate Moss made her modeling debut 20 years ago, ushering in an era of "heroin chic." In 2006, at least two models died from complications linked to eating disorders, which prompted some in Europe to try to ban skinny models from the runway.

Efforts were more modest in the United States. The Council of Fashion Designers of America held workshops on eating disorders and recommended that designers keep models under 16 off the runway, offer healthier snacks backstage and require those identified as having an eating disorder to seek professional help if they want to continue modeling.

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"I think there's progress," said Fish, creative consultant for KCD Worldwide, which produces fashion shows and events. "The girls are still slim. We didn't want them not to be slim. We wanted a projection of health."

Some critics consider the industry's efforts lacking because they still let skinny winnies rule the runways _ while the models suffer to become walking hangers.

As a new model at 15, Coco Rocha said she went to Singapore and lost 10 pounds in six weeks. When she returned to the U.S. she was so obsessed with food, she beat herself up over eating an apple.

"I'll never forget the piece of advice I got from people in the industry when they saw my new body," she wrote in an e-mail to The Associated Press. "They said, 'You need to lose more weight. The look this year is anorexia. We don't want you to be anorexic but that's what we want you to look like.'"

Rocha is one of the few models to speak out about the issue, even as ultra-thin models find their way into pro-anorexia "Thinspiration" videos. The question isn't just about model health; it's about who will win the hearts and minds of the teenagers and young girls who look up to them.

Young girls can now see more realistic shapes on television, from the Dove Campaign for Real Beauty to the plus-size winner on "America's Next Top Model." And models have largely disappeared from the covers of magazines, replaced by celebrities who generate their own is-she-too-thin headlines.

But that doesn't mean models aren't influencing girls and women.

Carol Weston, advice columnist for Girls' Life Magazine, said she gets letters from tween girls who want to models or are looking for weight-loss advice. Modeling "seems so glamorous," she said. She said many teenagers confess that they starve themselves, purge or use diet pills.

Eating disorders groups have recommended requiring adult models to have a body mass index of at least 18.5 _ the lower limits of a normal weight _ and an independent medical certification affirming that they do not suffer from an eating disorder.

"They do drug testing for sports. Why? To keep competition clean but hopefully also to save lives. That's what we want, too," said Lynn Grefe, CEO of the National Eating Disorders Association.

But such measures are called Draconian by Dr. Susan Ice, a medical director for an eating disorders treatment center and member of the Council of Fashion Designers of America health initiative.

For now, the goal is simply to raise awareness, said CFDA president Diane von Furstenberg.

"I think that it's a good thing to do it the way we're doing it as opposed to throwing those poor girls on a scale and terrifying them even more," she said.

Because of the initiative, some models were identified as having an eating disorder, referred for treatment and are back on the runways, Fish said. Some who didn't look healthy weren't used.

There has been some pressure for designers to increase their model size to a 6, but the designers prefer models whose modest curves don't compete with the clothes, Fish said. London recently dropped its plan to require medical exams for models because of a lack of international support.

"Thin is going to be the ruling look _ until someone says, 'I want voluptuous,'" said Fish. "I don't know if that ever is going to come back."

__

AP Fashion Writer Samantha Critchell contributed to this report.

Some members of the fashion industry were patting themselves on the back last week with claims that there were more "curves and smiles" on the Fashion Week runways this year. (See AP article below.) ...
Some members of the fashion industry were patting themselves on the back last week with claims that there were more "curves and smiles" on the Fashion Week runways this year. (See AP article below.) ...
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I wish more men would start dieting. I'm sick of fatties all around me with their beer bellies and love handles eww.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 AM on 09/18/2008
- GreyWolfSC I'm a Fan of GreyWolfSC 8 fans permalink

"The look this year is anorexia."

**** you. I'm sorry, but that's just all I can say to something like that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 AM on 09/17/2008
- walleymr I'm a Fan of walleymr 9 fans permalink
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Having studied fashion design, I can say designers are encouraged to create stretched, exaggerated silhouettes. As a result, designers wind up using models who themselves look stretched and exaggerated. Not saying whether that's right or wrong, just how it is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 AM on 09/17/2008
- iambusto I'm a Fan of iambusto 5 fans permalink

wow, this forum is filled with chubby chasers !! whatever floats your boat i guess.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:35 PM on 09/16/2008
- Fudgefase I'm a Fan of Fudgefase 16 fans permalink
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Come to Scotland. You don't even have to run to catch them...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:52 AM on 09/17/2008
- chroma601 I'm a Fan of chroma601 13 fans permalink

We're chubby chasers if we don't like anorexic bodies? Come on!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:43 PM on 09/17/2008
- AnneOlivia I'm a Fan of AnneOlivia 4 fans permalink
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These chicks look about a long walk away from concentration camp survivors. Frightening.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:36 PM on 09/16/2008
- brenner21 I'm a Fan of brenner21 6 fans permalink
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Girls, Women: stop starving yourselves for us. I don't know any men who is attracted to the models pictured above (and every month in the fashion magazines), except maybe a meth addict.

We love you *because* nothing is more pleasing than a curvaceous, healthy woman. The greatest thing mothers could do for their daughters is teach them how to be anti-fashion...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:59 PM on 09/16/2008

God those women are fat!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:23 PM on 09/16/2008
- Fudgefase I'm a Fan of Fudgefase 16 fans permalink
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Silly man. We starve ourselves to see which of us bitc4es can be skinniest - that makes her IT for the week.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:53 AM on 09/17/2008

What's wrong with being thin? It's possible to be thin without starving yourself. You just need to burn more calories than you consume. You can be very skinny without being unhealthy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:46 PM on 09/16/2008

I have women in my family who are naturally skinny, so I don't hate on skinny women. But when they tell you, "You need to look anorexic" and girls beat themselves up for actually taking a bite of something, then there's cause for concern. A size 6 will not take away from the dress! Honestly, if the clothes are hanging off you, I think that causes people to look at their bodies instead of the dress.
People talk about skinny models being a bad influence for girls, but the models suffer too!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:56 PM on 09/16/2008
- Badbone I'm a Fan of Badbone 11 fans permalink

Skinny women are real women too. They have just as much right as their larger sisters to wear clothes that look good on them. The abuse that abuse that people on here heap on these ladies sickens me. I guess "body acceptance" doesn't include those on the lighter end of the scale.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:28 PM on 09/16/2008
- Furby I'm a Fan of Furby 66 fans permalink
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Genetically thin women are one thing (and they are very rare, as rare as real adult blondes). Anorexically skinny women are quite another. Yes they too have the right to wear anything they want, and they also have the right to commit slow suicide, like any smoker out there. If you're skinny because you're not eating enough food (tell tale signs, facial peach fuzz, protruding collar bones, elbows wider than arms, dry skin, brittle finger nails, depression, low self-esteem, constant fatigue, etc.) then you might have body dysmorphia, something that isn't being helped by media's representation of beauty. What you are NOT is naturally thin, you're skinny and there's a difference.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:20 PM on 09/16/2008
- GingerB I'm a Fan of GingerB 82 fans permalink
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Anorexia is not a good look and definitely not "a projection of health".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:24 PM on 09/16/2008

i did a runway show as a "special performer" a few years ago. i am normal/slender weight, not skinny at all, and the models backstage were looking at me in weird ways, almost as if i were some oddity! then i heard this from one of their conversations: "oh my god, i totally messed up and ate yesterday.." !

very sad. looking fit and slim is one thing, but i prefer the look of real women. natalie wood and katharine hepburn were slim and lovely, for example, not walking bent coat hangers.

i hope this laughable trend disappears.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 PM on 09/16/2008

Bags of bones. Just pathetic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 PM on 09/16/2008
- chroma601 I'm a Fan of chroma601 13 fans permalink

Here is a transcript from a SNL skit about models and fashion: http://snltranscripts.jt.org/99/99ccrosstalk.phtml

I think it hits the nail on the head!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:49 PM on 09/16/2008
- ebanks84 I'm a Fan of ebanks84 94 fans permalink

That is so disgusting to see these young lady's bones like that. How can you address the fashion piece when their bones strike you first and foremost? What have we become?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 AM on 09/16/2008
- moAb I'm a Fan of moAb 4 fans permalink
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Agree. Keep in mind that filming/photos "adds" weight to the model's appearance. In real life up close and personal these folks look even more anorectic if you can believe it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:23 PM on 09/16/2008

The closer to bone, the sweeter the meat

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:36 PM on 09/16/2008
- Fudgefase I'm a Fan of Fudgefase 16 fans permalink
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I refer you to an article in Huff a few weeks back about women having shoulder liposuction so they can get that 'sticky out knobble' thing on their necks. This has gone beyond funny people. Our kids are in trouble - and these ladies are victims - well paid for sure - but still victims of a fad.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 AM on 09/17/2008
- djcrsn I'm a Fan of djcrsn 17 fans permalink

But I prefer to work on the bones BEFORE the hungry mastiff strips them bare and starts cracking them

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:01 PM on 09/17/2008
- Palemoon I'm a Fan of Palemoon 164 fans permalink
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Looks like things are getting better in the modeling industry, so that's one big plus there. Wait, don't run away, I didn't mean that as in "plus size", come back, come back.

I think there's a couple that are borderline too thin, but that's just me. About 2 or 3 weeks at Grandma's eating good homecooked meals will balance them out nicely.

But seriously, shouldn't a woman want to fill out the dress they are wearing? Even some of the normal size model photos makes it look like a curtain hanging off a coatrack. Maybe it's the oddball designers?

I think the 2 best pieces in the photos, are 5/6 and 7. 7 I think looks best overall as it flatters without being flashy. Plus the model has a nice body. 5/6 also flatters, but I'm not so impressed with the colors. A bit too busy looking for my tastes. I'd prefer a solid color with accents, or perhaps a 2 color look, such as a regal Welsh red/green combo. Otherwise, dress looks fine as well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:09 AM on 09/16/2008
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