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Plus Sizes Becoming More Mainstream
WFRV.COM ^ | 04-23-2006 | AP

Posted on 04/23/2006 5:29:11 PM PDT by Extremely Extreme Extremist

(AP) KING OF PRUSSIA, Pa. Kathy Curtis waded through a sea of colorful camisoles, gypsy skirts and lacy tees at Lane Bryant, shopping for a deal.

The 45-year-old suburban Philadelphia resident can afford to be picky. As a size 20, she didn't use to have as many choices in plus sizes. But more retailers are finally paying attention to customers like her — if she doesn't like Lane Bryant, she can shop elsewhere.

"They could do more, but things are much more stylish than they were 10 years ago. Five years even," Curtis said. Before, "they figured, give them a couple of extra large tops and they're happy."

As waistlines expand across America, fashionable plus-size clothes are proliferating and moving into the mainstream. In some cases, plus sizes are leaving the outer fringes of the store floor to hang next to "regular-sized" clothes as the average American gets bigger. Where they remain separated, plus sizes are being displayed in specialized boutiques like petites.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world's largest retailer, is adding more racks of plus-size apparel in its "George," "Metro 7" and other lines due to increased demand, said spokeswoman Linda Blakley. And the larger sizes hang right next to the smaller sizes.

"You can shop all the lines in one section," Blakley said.

Old Navy, a unit of Gap Inc., carries plus sizes in 250 stores nationwide, up from 55 stores nearly two years ago, said spokesman Greg Rossiter. Old Navy started offering them online in 2000.

"We recognize that the market is underserved," he said. "The response has been very good."

Kmart, a unit of Sears Holding Corp., hired a special designer for plus sizes a year ago. Around the same time, it also introduced "attention," a missy and plus-size clothing line that only uses stretch fabric. Kmart said it's always displayed plus sizes in the same section as other sizes.

"It is doing really well," said June Beckstead, vice president of design at Sears Holding Corp.

The Kohl's department store chain added plus sizes for its "Apt. 9" and "Daisy Fuentes" collections last spring.

Retailers who have long catered to plus sizes are getting into their second act.

This year, Liz Claiborne Inc. in New York is opening five "Elisabeth" plus-size boutiques. The designer, which began offering plus sizes in 1990, already has 28 such stores nationwide.

"Plus-size women are very, very loyal to brands. They have a lot of spending power," said Barry Zelman, general manager of specialty retail at Liz Claiborne.

Charming Shoppes Inc. of Bensalem, Pa. announced last month that it was rolling out a chain of plus-size lingerie stores nationwide called Cacique. The stores will carry sizes 12 to 28 and feature larger dressing rooms with tri-fold mirrors for viewing at different angles.

The parent of Lane Bryant, Catherines and Fashion Bug already had seven Cacique stores as of mid-March and plans to open 50 stores by year's end.

Retailers are expanding into larger sizes because demand has grown: Two-thirds of American adults are either overweight or obese today compared with 46 percent a quarter century ago, according to the American Obesity Association in Washington, D.C.

Among children ages 6 to 11, about 30 percent are overweight or obese, up fourfold from 25 years ago. Nearly a third of those ages 12 to 19 are heavy, with the percentage more than doubling during the same period, the nonprofit advocacy group said.

That's why "virtually everybody" is looking to cater to the plus-size market, said Kurt Barnard, president of Barnard's Retail Consulting Group in Nutley, N.J. "That's where the dollars are."

But it took decades for many retailers to see the light.

"The stores did not want the plus-size woman to mix with the svelte and slender," Barnard said. "Bad for the image, they felt."

Maxine Monroe, the 37-year-old publisher of an upcoming booklet called "Curvaceous Fashion Guide for the Plus Size Woman," said retailers have taken this market for granted for a long time. At least in the past, larger-size sections tended to be tucked away in less-visited parts of stores.

"It's horrible, just horrible," said the size-24 Philadelphia resident. It's as if retailers were telling her, "'I'll sell it to you, but I don't want to see you at my store,'" she said.

Size snobbism, however, is shrinking as retailers realize that outfitting the Rubenesque shopper is a growth niche in the mature women's apparel market, said Marshal Cohen, chief industry analyst at The NPD Group, a consumer research firm in Port Washington, N.Y.

From March 2005 to February 2006, sales of plus-size women's apparel rose by nearly 7 percent to $19 billion, according to the research company. That compares with a 3.4 percent increase in sales of women's clothing as a whole to over $101 billion.

Plus sizes are more profitable for retailers. On average, plus-size customers pay 8 percent to 10 percent more for clothes because they go on sale less often, Cohen said.

But as plus sizes become more mainstream, prices should drop, Barnard said.

That would be welcome news to 42-year-old Vanessa White, a New Castle, Del. resident who drove to Philadelphia recently with her family to shop for plus sizes at an Old Navy.

She said she pays more for her clothes, but thinks retailers should change their tune.

"The average is not average anymore," White said. "The average is plus size."


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: badonkadonk; ilikebigbutts; obesity

1 posted on 04/23/2006 5:29:13 PM PDT by Extremely Extreme Extremist
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist


I don't know that people are getting bigger, when I was a teen girls average sizes were from 7 to 12. Now they are size 1's and 2's and considered fat at size 5.


2 posted on 04/23/2006 5:33:14 PM PDT by SouthernFreebird
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist
People should be taxed according to % of body fat.....

the anorexic would get a rebate.

3 posted on 04/23/2006 5:34:59 PM PDT by CROSSHIGHWAYMAN (Toon Town, Iran...........where reality is the real fantasy.)
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To: SouthernFreebird
Don't take this wrong but "what are you smoking?". Americans are much fatter than they were when I was a kid. Walk in to any Wal-Mart or Golden Corral and look around. I can promise you that there will be at least 2 or 3 300+ pounders (women and men). 15 years ago a 300 pound women would attract alot of stares and subtle whispers. Now they are so common place, people hardly notice or care anymore.
4 posted on 04/23/2006 5:38:32 PM PDT by okkev68
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To: SouthernFreebird

The sizes got larger. The old 12 is now about a 9.


5 posted on 04/23/2006 5:48:18 PM PDT by fzx12345 (Three lefts don't make a right; they invent one.)
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To: SouthernFreebird

Clothes are getting bigger. The woman who wore a size 14 20 years ago would now fit into a size 10.


6 posted on 04/23/2006 5:49:41 PM PDT by speekinout
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To: speekinout
Clothes are getting bigger. The woman who wore a size 14 20 years ago would now fit into a size 10.

Very true -- and smaller sizes are getting harder to find. Stores are stocking what sells -- large sizes.

7 posted on 04/23/2006 5:58:39 PM PDT by browardchad
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist

I am wondering when rap artist "Sir Mix-a-Lot" to open his own chain of stores.


8 posted on 04/23/2006 6:10:04 PM PDT by ikka
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To: okkev68

Well, I'll agree that 300 pounds is excessive, I'd say that some people are overly hysterical and judgemental about the issue.

I'm five foot nine and two hundred and twenty pounds - and I work out pretty much every day and have for a while. Admittedly, I don't eat as well as I ought to, but still - people have radically different body types.

Indeed, when it comes to clothes, I have a huge problem with shirts in that I have extremely broad shoulders and a thick neck, which means that I end up with shirts which either barely fit around the neck, or hang off my sides like a dress. It's a huge pain in the ass sometimes.

The one interesting thing is that I'm Canadian and, in Canada, I tend to be heavier than the average. When I cross the border into the United States, I tend to find that I'm far closer to average.

Not that I care (some Canadians wear it as a mark of superiority). After all, American weight is a mark of prosperity and, in general, fat people - like smokers - are probably saving the public health system money over the long run, if we account fairly.


9 posted on 04/23/2006 6:13:26 PM PDT by furquhart (Time for a New Crusade - Deus lo Volt!)
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To: browardchad

And if you're over 50, it's a real search to find age appropriate styles in smaller sizes. Low rider capris and crop tops? Yeah, right. :-)


10 posted on 04/23/2006 7:19:59 PM PDT by speekinout
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To: furquhart
I think it is pretty easy to tell the difference between someone who is "stocky" and someone who is just plain fat. Although, I am considered obese by the BMI chart at 6'2" and 220lbs. On Sunday, I will be running my 5th half marathon and second in 2 weeks, so, obviously, charts and standards are not a consistent way to measure people.

But, I am constantly amazed when I walk into Wal-Mart at the every increasing number of really large women. There was an article posted on FR last night about the fourfold increase in obese children (6-11) over the last 25 years.
Americans are getting fatter and fatter, which is why Type II diabetes has skyrocketed to the top of the disease charts.
11 posted on 04/24/2006 6:13:44 AM PDT by okkev68
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To: okkev68

I am the Maxine mentioned in the article and I can tell you I am of course plus size. I work out regularly I have my problem spots like every other woman. But for the most part I love my body. I am not trying to be an activist but I am try to help women understand the importance of taking care of the body they have verses waiting until they are the perfect size x to take care of themselves.


12 posted on 04/26/2006 3:39:04 PM PDT by Maxine Monroe (Curvaceous Fashion Guide for the Plus Size Woman)
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To: Maxine Monroe
Trust me, I don't expect every women to be a size 2. My wife is a size 12 and extremely hot. She knows that at 5'9" and having 3 kids, she is never going to be shopping at the petite store. But I know, secretly, she would rather look like Karen Carpenter, which I think is insane.

But the fact still remains that Americans are getting fatter and more unhealthy. There is a battle going on between Hollywood/media and the food industry. One side wants everyone to look like Calista Flockhart and Brad Pitt, and the other side wants to "supersize" us.
13 posted on 04/27/2006 6:17:44 AM PDT by okkev68
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To: okkev68
Fat is one thing, unhealthy is another. I complete encourage plus size women to become more active. Because your plus size doesn't automatically make you unhealthy. I can attest to that. What is unhealthy is how a woman looks at her self and her life depending on her weight. 4wow.net
14 posted on 04/30/2006 7:23:38 AM PDT by Maxine Monroe (Curvaceous Fashion Guide for the Plus Size Woman)
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To: SouthernFreebird

The fact that people are larger has caused a knee-jerk reaction to where ALL teenage girls think they’re fat even when they’re not.


15 posted on 11/19/2007 9:00:43 AM PST by RockinRight (Just because you're pro-life and talk about God a lot doesn't mean you're a conservative.)
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist

Hi there. Are you a large person? Pleasantly plump? A little on the hefty side, perhaps? Well, let's face it: Are you FAT? When you go jogging, do you leave pot-holes? When you make love, do you have to give directions? At the zoo, do the elephants throw YOU peanuts? Do you look at a menu and say 'OK'? Well, now, you can eat all you want, because at Thornton Melon's "Tall & Fat" stores, we've got you covered. That's right. Fine woolen, and woolen-blend suits and sport coats, in all the larger sizes - husky, stout, extra-stout, and the new Hindenburg line. And for you ladies we have caftans, muumuus, and our own exclusive A-frame in all colors and patterns. Yes, we have miles and miles of fabric. So take it from me, Thornton Melon, if you want to look thin, you hang out with fat people.

16 posted on 11/19/2007 9:05:20 AM PST by dfwgator
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