
It seems I was born too late, dang it.


Though the perspective and proportions are deliberately skewed, and this is not an attempt at realism, these women are definitely of "heroic" proportions. Don't they look happy? Who says you have to have ribs sticking out to be joyous and attractive? Why wait until you lose weight before you start doing all the things you want to do?

Here are some statistics for you:
*Most fashion models are thinner than 98% of American women
*The average fashion model is 5'9" to 6' tall, weighs 110 - 118 lbs and is seventeen to twenty-six years old & wears a size 6 - 8 dress.
*The average American woman is 5'5" tall, weighs 142 lbs, and is 44 years old.
*Forty percent of women wear a size 14 or above...
*Sales of plus-size clothes in 1996 were more than $20 billion...
*Plus size sales rose to $47 billion in 2005.
*Lillian Russell, the leading sex symbol at the end of the 19th century, weighed over 200 pounds.
*Marilyn Monroe would be considered "overweight" by today's standards. She fluctuated between a size 14 and size 18 dress
3 comments:
I know why, but I don't know why there is a perception that bigger girls aren't pretty.
Not everyone likes em like bones (certainly not me), and we should all be happy that we're individually different.
There can be nothing prettier in this world than the differences we all have. If we all looked the same, we'd be boring.
By the way... I LOVE hourglasses. LOL ;-)
I remember reading an interview of Elizabeth Hurley once calling Marilyn huge, and I so want to smack her too skinny ass for that!
Quite so. Speaking as a painter, it is a dreadful thing to try and paint a bony woman and make her look attractive. Can't be done! Beauty is in a curved line: not an angle.
Post a Comment