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Celebrity Dress Size Secret That Will Make You Feel Better

Posted: 05/06/11 09:38 PM ET

Trying on clothes isn't always good lighting, perfect-fitting jeans, and slimming mirrors. It actually kind of sucks sometimes. At some point or another, everyone has experienced the shock -- and downright anger -- when the size you think you are doesn't fit you. Well, make that everybody but celebrities.

Recently, More editor Lesley Jane Seymour let the Today show -- and the world -- in on a little secret: Fashion editors cut the size labels out of clothes on fashion shoots, as not to damage the oh-so-fragile egos of actresses. She said, "When we go to shoots it's all about the ego. If a celebrity says she's a size 8 and we know she's not we cut the sizes out because we know she won't put it on if it says it's a 10."

And you thought you had issues.

Sure, it's a blow to the ego when you wind up purchasing a pair of pants in a size 10 instead of an eight, but if they fit and look good, who cares? It's a well-known fact that all designers' "size charts" are not created equally. (But it sure does feel good when they run big!) Could you imagine not buying a dress or a pair of jeans that fit well because of the size? That's lunacy, I say!

So, if celebrities refuse to try on clothes that "aren't their size" on shoots, they must be missing out on a lot of great things when they head out shopping on their own. "Oh my God, this Marc Jacobs dress is to die for. Oh, they only have a size 10? Next." As a lover of fancy fashion that I'll probably never get to own, this hurts me.

And what do they do when they get married? Everybody knows wedding dresses run big (except if you get yours from J.Crew, like I did). Will an actress bride not wear the Monique Lhuillier of her dreams because it's "not available" in her coveted size four?

Get a grip, ladies. You're all, like, a size negative zero. If you need to wear that "dreaded two" once in while, suck it up. You know you're going to look good -- and less delusional.

What do you think of editors cutting the size labels our of their clothes?

Written by Nicole Fabian-Weber for CafeMom's blog, The Stir.

 

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Trying on clothes isn't always good lighting, perfect-fitting jeans, and slimming mirrors. It actually kind of sucks sometimes. At some point or another, everyone has experienced the shock -- and down...
Trying on clothes isn't always good lighting, perfect-fitting jeans, and slimming mirrors. It actually kind of sucks sometimes. At some point or another, everyone has experienced the shock -- and down...
 
 
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Red45
We can turn the tide
07:10 PM on 05/28/2011
When I worked at I. Magnin at Stanford when I was in college in the 60's, associates cut out labels for their biggest spending customers all the time. They'd cut out size tags and send a bunch of clothes to the customer's home, then pick up what the customer didn't want. That was decades ago. I'm sure Neiman's, Bloomingdale's, and Saks do it, too.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CynAnne
Laureates in Fact and Reality
06:13 PM on 05/08/2011
Wow...that seems sad, and sadder still that those women apparently cannot see their own bodies without being afraid of what others will whisper about the pieces of material covering those same bodies - an unhappy way to live, for sure.
Konnie
PO'd PROGRESSIVE
09:49 PM on 05/07/2011
this is a suggestion that will never fly, but i'd love to have womens clothing size charted exactly
the way mens clothing is. AND A TAILOR ON STAFF to hem the pants and do custom fittings.
can you imagine???????????????
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kelly Jade
01:58 PM on 05/09/2011
I would love this
I am very short (5 ft tall), have an hourglass shape with defined waist hips and a bust line and it is impossible to wear most anything without having it fitted--which is expensive!--and normally involves a little bit of travel for someone who doesn't have a car. Everything is too long, fits my chest but billows out and is shapeless around my waist, sits too high on my waist, makes me look like a stripper or any number of other unattractive variations
You'd think more women than men would use an on-site tailor!
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Red45
We can turn the tide
07:13 PM on 05/28/2011
Whereas that type of tailoring comes with men's clothing but women have to pay for it. Try to get a dry cleaners to do (wash, dry, iron) a woman's white cotton shirt for the same $1 they charge to do a man's white cotton shirt. You can't even get a good excuse from dry cleaners for the discrimination.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
way2sunny
12:13 PM on 05/07/2011
Sizes are just a guideline anyway, there's always variation. At any given time I have clothes in at least four sizes in my closet that all fit. (I'm not talking about the "skinny clothes" corner, they might fit again someday!)
10:05 AM on 05/07/2011
This could start a whole new fashion sizing trend.

Size: 10
Size: Actress Size 8

Sizes created just for the oh-so-fragile egos of actresses.