Alan Eardley
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So we would not expect to find clothing from the period (including military uniforms) below 32" waist? Not my experience. Also, I don't think we can reasonably assume that one catalogue by one vendor defines the whole range of sizes of a population. Maybe the 'middle class professional' to whom you refer was more well-fed and took less excercise than the manual workers who made up the majority of the population in the 1940s.
Statistical studies show that the average man has become larger in terms of height, weight (and consequently BMI) between the 1940s and the present day, and the average age of the population (including males) has increased, so any representative sample taken today will include more older (and less fit) males. I base this statement on papers in medical journals, for example a study of records from the UK between 1947 and 1998:
H. Woodward, J.E. Rutty and G.N. Rutty* (2001) A 51-year retrospective study of the trends of height, weight and body mass index at the time of death in those aged 16–103. Journal of Clinical Forensic Medicine
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 66-73.
Quote from abstract: 'The data confirmed reported trends that the population is getting older, taller and heavier with the mean BMI increasing such that the proportion of individuals who can be classified as obese is increasing. These trends will potentially have an impact on healthcare as more people will have an increased risk of associated morbidity and mortality, as well as an implication on welfare and housing for the increasingly elderly population'.
Studies of the effect of a war-time diet on male populations are not so common, but a classic Japanese study showed that males who were at the adolescent stage in the period up to 1942 were significantly smaller than the previous and succeeding generation and never made up their 'growth retardation'. In other words, boys who became men in the 1940s in Japan (which had similar food shortages to the UK) were smaller throughout their lives. See:
Shunen, I. Tetsuya A, Katsuya F, Hidenobu K1, Soichiro K, Takafumi E and Masayuki, I (1997) Body Constitution of Young Male Workers in Kyoto, Japan in the World War II Period. Journal of Occupational Health. Vol.39, No.2 Pp.152-153
Personally, I have little problem in accepting that the average male in most countries that experienced wartime restrictions was smaller in the 1940s than today, but everyone believes what they want to believe.
Equally, I am not convinced that a 180lb man in a suit looks or moves like a 150lb man in a suit, irrespective of how it is tailored or which tailor did it. But then again, same comment as above.
Alan
* Authors from Department of Forensic Pathology, Medico-Legal Centre, Sheffield, UK; School of Health Studies, Nursing Division, University of Bradford, UK
Alan
Statistical studies show that the average man has become larger in terms of height, weight (and consequently BMI) between the 1940s and the present day, and the average age of the population (including males) has increased, so any representative sample taken today will include more older (and less fit) males. I base this statement on papers in medical journals, for example a study of records from the UK between 1947 and 1998:
H. Woodward, J.E. Rutty and G.N. Rutty* (2001) A 51-year retrospective study of the trends of height, weight and body mass index at the time of death in those aged 16–103. Journal of Clinical Forensic Medicine
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 66-73.
Quote from abstract: 'The data confirmed reported trends that the population is getting older, taller and heavier with the mean BMI increasing such that the proportion of individuals who can be classified as obese is increasing. These trends will potentially have an impact on healthcare as more people will have an increased risk of associated morbidity and mortality, as well as an implication on welfare and housing for the increasingly elderly population'.
Studies of the effect of a war-time diet on male populations are not so common, but a classic Japanese study showed that males who were at the adolescent stage in the period up to 1942 were significantly smaller than the previous and succeeding generation and never made up their 'growth retardation'. In other words, boys who became men in the 1940s in Japan (which had similar food shortages to the UK) were smaller throughout their lives. See:
Shunen, I. Tetsuya A, Katsuya F, Hidenobu K1, Soichiro K, Takafumi E and Masayuki, I (1997) Body Constitution of Young Male Workers in Kyoto, Japan in the World War II Period. Journal of Occupational Health. Vol.39, No.2 Pp.152-153
Personally, I have little problem in accepting that the average male in most countries that experienced wartime restrictions was smaller in the 1940s than today, but everyone believes what they want to believe.
Equally, I am not convinced that a 180lb man in a suit looks or moves like a 150lb man in a suit, irrespective of how it is tailored or which tailor did it. But then again, same comment as above.
Alan
* Authors from Department of Forensic Pathology, Medico-Legal Centre, Sheffield, UK; School of Health Studies, Nursing Division, University of Bradford, UK
Alan
benstephens said:True Baron that is the ideal, but is using a fashion plate the same as a using a fashion photo now to say what the average look is like and how clothes should fit? I am unsure if really many people were actually like that, as today, very few men look like the models we see displaying the clothes of designers and fashion stores.
Alan, the Army and Navy catologue starts the waist size of "off the peg" trousers at 32", and increases to I think 42", so one would say that this is the most popular size range, and thus the range for the middle class professional of the time.
Ben