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Wednesday, 8 June 2011

The Big Issue



That's Not My Age strongly believes that you don't have to have youth to have style. Which you've probably gathered already, as I spend my mid-life banging on about individuality in the over-forties. I always try to use inspirational imagery, friendly language and give realistic advice. My place in the blogosphere may be the size of a newly-formed follicle on Wayne Rooney's pate, but one small step for womankind and all that. Over at Graduate Fashion Week yesterday, age, race and size were on the agenda as the very first educational Centre for Diversity was launched by the Minister for Equalities, Lynne Featherstone. Hooray! This latest project from All Walks Beyond The Catwalk reaches designers at the start of their careers and encourages them to embrace diversity by designing for ordinary bodies rather than the usual size 8 mannequins or skinny young models.



All Walks was founded back in 2009 by fashion commentator Caryn Franklin, PR expert Debra Bourne and model Erin O'Connor. The team that inspired knitwear designer Mark Fast to use size 12-14 catwalk models (causing the stylist to walk out and the spring 2010 collection to sell out) and worked with Rankin on the Snapped exhibition, at the National Portrait Gallery earlier this year, has created the Centre for Diversity in conjunction with the fashion department at Edinburgh College of Art (ECA). In order to 'Celebrate & Educate,' second year students have been paired up with 'icons,' or real women in a range of different ages, sizes and shapes. Course leader, Mal Burkinshaw gave a heartfelt talk on how the experience had deeply affected the students, how once they got to know their real-life models he saw behaviour and attitudes change. Realising that the people they were designing for had needs and feelings, the ECA students gradually became 'emotionally considerate' and by the time it came to the catwalk show, were treating their icons like family.

More colleges are expected to follow, and Anne Chaisty from the Arts University College Bournemouth and Philip Clarke at Southampton Solent University have already incorporated body shape projects into the curriculum.



After today's presentation, I had a very quick chat with Caryn Franklin, and asked her how ageism in fashion could be properly addressed, when really we still only see Twiggy and a couple of other older models in the media:

'Research from Cambridge University PhD student, Ben Berry - who monitors female consumer responses to fashion - says that when women see adverts with models who are similar to themselves, they buy. So accountants and CEOs for the major retailers will take notice because by doing this they'll improve their profits and improve customer wellbeing at the same time. It's a win-win situation.'



And what about the latest cover of Italian Vogue isn't showing plus size models in their underwear a bit of a cop-out?

'It's great as long as it's not tokenism - though obviously if the models aren't wearing clothes, maybe there weren't any samples available?! The magazine needs to tell designers that they want to run another cover in three months time, and that they need to make some larger size samples. That's what we do.'


Franca Sozzani, take note.








What are your thoughts on diversity in the fashion industry?

Photos from All Walks and How to Look Good

12 comments:

  1. Beautiful photo of Valerie Pain.I love to see women of all sizes, ages and skin colour in fashion shoots. (I also like to be able to see the clothes, but that's another issue). When I see clothes I like shown on a model nearer my own age I am MUCH more likely to consider buying. Why has it taken the fashion industry so long to catch up with this ? After all, we are the ones with more disposable income. What about shorter models too ? I'm only 5' 2" and I have to think - 'wait, you're not going to look like her, she's probably 10" taller than you ! '

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  2. Hear! Hear!
    I'm glad I found your blog - a hard thing when all the fashion and styling blogs are written by and targeting people 20 years younger than me (at least in calendar years :-) ). I agree, it's time that somebody is coping on that it is actually a win-win situation catering for all ages. You hear that 50 is the 'new 40', 40 the 'new 30', but when it comes tot fashion industry - it was (at least up to now) just talk.

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  3. When it come to age diversity in the fashion world, I am not surprised that hardly any exists - I spend my life baffled by the fact that about 95% of my peers (I am turning 40 this year) have utterly given up on fashion and/or style as something to be left to the youths only. Perhaps that is the natural order of things, and style is something that only the minority actually care about beyond a certain age - in which case the fashion industry's indifference to anyone over about 25 is a perfectly reasonable position. Boring, but economically logical. I've never expected the mainstream fashion world (or even the the high fashion world) to cater to me particularly, so I don't miss it. Greater age diversity would be interesting and fun, and maybe it might make a few more of my peers consider style as something still within their domain. I just don't know!

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  4. Hi my dear-a really fabulous post and so relevant and inspirational. Its great to see this issue is becoming more mainstream and hopefully more designers will take note too xx

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  5. I am glad that diversity is being taught at some of our universities. Fashion and age seem to completely unrelated in most of our media. This is exactly why I started blogging, I have no interest in trying to look like my 20 year old daughter but I don't want to look frumpy either. Thanks for a great post!

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  6. The trouble is magazine are slow to understand this. Their sales are down due to not engaging with their readers, as they lose readers because they think the magazine isn't for them - they identify the magazine with younger women.

    US Vogue is better at keeping older women engaged than British Vogue.

    But the real point is that more diversity, more straightforwardness in fashion would work a treat!

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  7. I always enjoy the Guardian Weekend's All Ages feature but I know lots of readers complain that despite the mix of ages the models remain stick thin (although I never notice their bodies). xxx

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  8. is ther a way for an average person to sign up to be a guinea pig for am talented fashion student? I would love to go through the experience of having a piece designed for me.

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  9. Wonderful post. Great incentive. Xxxx

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  10. Thanks so much for all for your comments.

    projectforty - I think you should email All Walks on info@allwalks.org. I'm sure they'd love to hear from you.

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  11. I'm with Vix on the Guardian.

    I do think the models look bloody gorgeous on the IV cover xx

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