Kim_B
Practically Family
- Messages
- 820
- Location
- NW Indiana
:eusa_clap
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!!!
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!!!
pigeon toe said:My best friends, who are both very petite, size 0-2, are now having the hardest time finding anything that fits them because clothes are becoming sized so crazily. Sucks for everyone!
TaxiGirl said:I had that conversation with a very petite friend of mine last week... she was trying to buy an interview suit, but no where in the mall could she come up with anything in her size -- the 0s were too big.
My biggest problem, on the other hand, is that I can get clothes that fit in the waist or in the hips but not both. *sigh* And of course that the sizing numbers vary, apparently at random.
Miss_Bella_Hell said:Actually, I *love* it when things that will fill me are listed as "plus size" or "XL" or whatever, because slimmer gals won't even look at the listing and larger gals won't fit into it, so fewer people bid! But yeah, I'm a vintage 16 which is about an 8, so, I'm average these days. Maybe my vintage Lane Bryant was the smallest size in the shop!
Pink Dahlia said:That's funny Bella I find the opposite. Plus size or XL listings tend to get much more bids than S or M.
LizzieMaine said:As long as there's social cachet to be had in boasting of wearing smaller and smaller sizes, there'll be vanity sizing. It has nothing to do with the process of how clothes are designed or made, and everything to do with modern cultural standards. As long as they think it's what women want, it's what women will get.
The whole question of whether people are bigger than they used to be is an interesting one. I know that when the theatre where I work was being renovated, they had to remove every third seat -- because modern people take up much more space than people did when the place was built in 1923. So even if people aren't *bigger* overall on the average, I'd suspect they're *wider*.