88 560
Fashion Jobs
BLACK DIAMOND
Quality Engineer
Permanent · SALT LAKE CITY
LULULEMON
Community Specialist | Fort Worth Tanger Outlet
Permanent · FORT WORTH
LULULEMON
Expeditor | Branson Tanger Outlets
Permanent · BRANSON
LULULEMON
Community Specialist | Auburn Popup
Permanent · AUBURN
LULULEMON
Community Specialist | Aspen Place Local
Permanent · FLAGSTAFF
LULULEMON
Community Specialist | Kingston Pike
Permanent · KNOXVILLE
LULULEMON
Community Specialist | The Domain
Permanent · AUSTIN
LULULEMON
Community Specialist | First Street Napa
Permanent · NAPA
LULULEMON
Expeditor Factory Outlet| Orlando Vineland Premium Outlet
Permanent · ORLANDO
LULULEMON
Visual Merchandising Specialist | Contract | Houston Premium Outlet
Permanent · CYPRESS
PAUL SMITH
Stock Support - Woodbury Commons
Permanent · WOODBURY
TUMI
Human Resource Business Partner, Mansfield
Permanent · MANSFIELD
HENKEL
3rd Shift Production Manager
Permanent · WEST HAZLETON
HENKEL
Packaging Engineer
Permanent · STAMFORD
THE REALREAL
Field Sales Account Manager (Account Luxury Manager)
Permanent · SAN FRANCISCO
THE REALREAL
Field Sales Account Executive (Single Market Luxury Manager)
Permanent · PRINCETON
THE REALREAL
Senior Manager, Acquisition Marketing - Remote Usa(Eligible States)
Permanent · SAN FRANCISCO
THE REALREAL
Acquisition Marketing Coordinator - Remote Usa(Eligible States)
Permanent · SAN FRANCISCO
J. JILL
Manager, Treasury Operations
Permanent · TILTON
SHIMANO
Shipping Lead
Permanent · LADSON
CHANEL
Boutique Operations Specialist - Palisades Village, CA
Permanent · LOS ANGELES
SIGNET JEWELERS
General Manager - Jared - Memorial City
Permanent · HOUSTON
By
AFP
Published
Sep 22, 2009
Reading time
2 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Body shape debate stalks London catwalks

By
AFP
Published
Sep 22, 2009

© 2009 AFP - The debate about skinny models resurfaced at London Fashion Week on Monday 21 September, when a stylist was forced to deny she stormed out of a show because the designer was using larger-than-normal models.


Photo: AFP/File/Ben Stansall

Erika Kurihara told the Guardian newspaper that she left Saturday (19 September)'s show by up-and-coming knitwear designer Mark Fast because they "did not have the right walk for the catwalk" -- but said she had no problem with larger women.

Fast is known for his tight and revealing knitted dresses and has in the past provoked criticism that they would never fit normal women, making his decision to use three curvy women in his catwalk show unusual.

"I celebrate strong, healthy women," Kurihara told the newspaper.

She said: "Two of the bigger girls, although their faces were beautiful and their bodies beautiful, did not have the right walk for the catwalk. The walk is very important, and I wasn't happy.

"Mark was very upset that I didn't share his vision, as he saw it, so he asked me to leave."

Fast was unavailable for comment on Monday 21 September but the Canadian designer's managing director, Amanda May, told the Daily Telegraph newspaper that there were "creative differences with regards to the casting of those girls".

"There was a team change and we're glad we stuck to our vision," she said, adding: "There's this idea that only thin and slender women are able to wear Mark's dresses and he wanted to combat that."

Fast had been working with one of the models, Hayley Morley, a British size 12 (European size 40, US size 10), as part of a photo exhibition showcasing some of the best of design talent on different sized women aged 17 to 65.

Sarah Watkinson, director of plus-size model agency 12+ UK Model Management, which provided the three models for Fast's show, welcomed their inclusion in such a high-profile collection.

"It's a brilliant positive step in the right direction for London Fashion Week," she told AFP.

"He made a decision to use girls who are more curvy to express his collection because he felt he wanted to show his knitwear on a curvier body."

The fashion industry has been criticised for using so-called "size zero" models -- those who fit a US size zero -- particularly after the deaths of two South American women who had suffered from eating disorders.

A British report on the health of models in 2007 resulted in a ban on girls under 16 taking part in London Fashion Week.

However, Britain stopped short of measures taken in Spain and Italy, where models with a body mass index (BMI) below a certain level are barred.LONDON, Sept 21, 2009 (AFP)

Copyright © 2024 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed in this section (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the contents of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presses.