Archive for the ‘plus size’ Category

Beauty, Celebrity gossip, Celebrity Style, Features, Gallery, Magazine news, plus size

As Adele makes the cover of Vogue UK, we take a look at our favourite curvy celebrities

By emilyborrett on September 5th, 2011

Adele flatters her curves with classic LBDs and vintage-inspired makeup for an hourglass sex-siren look

Picture 1 of 7
Picture 1 of 7

It’s been quite a big week for plus-sized beauties everywhere, as the UK singer Adele has just become the face of Vogue UK’S October issue. The singer, who’s been attacked and slated for her voluptuous figure in the past must have just proved any haters wrong because the photographs are absolutely stunning. Could the notoriously fattist fashion industry be slowly changing it’s tune?

As someone who spent the majority of their teens being overweight, seeing real women in the fashion industry and in the media is something that is very important to me – with childhood eating disorders and body issues at an all-time high, it is more important than ever that young girls should grow up to see beautiful, relatable and healthy women as role models.

Today at ShinyStyle we’re celebrating some of the fashion and celebrity world’s sexiest and fun-loving curvy women, who wholeheartedly embrace fashion and have fashion embrace them back. From the bootylicious Amazonian jiggle of Beyonce, who completely controls and commands her audience when she performs in curve-hugging dramatic stage costumes, to Gossip singer Beth Ditto stomping the runways of Jean-Paul Gaultier, there are already some women out there promoting the idea of self-love and healthy body image. There just aren’t enough of them yet.

Unfortunuately, some of our curvy beauty idols have succumbed themselves to the pressure of dieting to fit into a starvation-happy culture. Who could forget Sophie Dahl’s transformation from the lusciously curvy, china-doll purring pussycat that used to own the catwalks to the stick-thin woman she is now, all eyes and cheekbones? You could say that it’s her prerogative to weigh whatever she wants – and of course, it is. But the fact that even a supermodel who once lived off her curves can buckle under the pressure of the media’s ideal is scary, and shows us that we need these healthy role models more than ever.

To see which curvy icons are in our gallery, check it out above.



Beauty, Celebrity gossip, Gossip, plus size

Kelly Osbourne calls Christina Aguilera a “fat bitch”

By emilyborrett on August 4th, 2011

Christina's been slated for her recent weight gain, but she looks fine to us- what do you think?

There’s major beef going down, as Kelly Osbourne has once again publicly insulted a celebrity – this time her target is the Burlesque actress and singer Christina Aguilera, whose figure has become a little fuller recently.

Kelly laid into the star as a member of the judging panel on the E!’s Fashion Police show, where  she had to pass comment on a photograph of Christina wearing a tight black dress.

She said: “Maybe she’s just becoming the fat bitch she was always born to be. I don’t know. She was a **** to me. She called me fat for so many f**king years, so you know what? F**k you, you’re fat too.” BEEF.

The comedian Joan Rivers, famous for her acid tongue, also chimed in likening Xtina to Snooki from Jersey Shore, adding, “She looks like Snooki’s Scandinavian cousin. It’s a pretty dress but she’s stuffed into it.” And for Joan, that’s pretty mild.

Quick Christina, think of something mean to say and tweet it right now! We love a good celebrity spat.



Celebrity Style, News, plus size

Kate Winslet thinks the public believe she is a “fat Viking”.

By Andrea Petrou on March 11th, 2011

Kate Winslet thinks the public believe she is a “fat Viking”.

The 35-year-old actress – who is well known for defending her curvy figure – is often complimented on how good she looks, leading to her presuming people think of her as bigger than she is.

She said: “It seems to me I look very different from how people expect me to be.

“Clearly they think I’m a great big fat Viking. My body is different through nothing other than my being older. My clothes fit me the same way they’ve fitted me for the last five, six years. And of course I was a lot more voluptuous then.”

However, she admits she is less keen to talk about her body now because its “hypocritical”.

Kate added to Britain’s Vogue magazine: “I felt I had to defend my body and took a very public stand, which I still absolutely believe in. But I’ve stopped talking about it now. And, at a certain point, it does become hypocritical.”

Despite not wanting to talk about her figure, Kate’s face is becoming more important to her and she often notices how she is gaining wrinkles.

The ‘Revolutionary Road’ star explained: “I’m more aware of things like wrinkles on my face. They’re becoming much more pronounced, because that’s the muscle I use the most when acting. But it’s my face. So, whatever.”



plus size

The Best Way to Buy Plus Size Clothing

By Andrea Petrou on October 1st, 2010

Sponsored post by Simplybe

It was not so long ago that we ladies of a more cuddly build were very limited with our choice of plus size clothes.  Most high street stores would have a pretty minimal selection and manyitems would look hopelessly out of date!  However, since the advent of the internet, things have dramatically changed for the better…

Now that we can purchase our plus size clothes online,everything is so much easier.  Companies such as Simplybe give us a fantastic choice of plus size clothes and every one of their items has plenty to offer in the way of style.  But the best thing of all about buying our clothing over the Net is we can do it at a time that suits us.  This means that shopping for garments is far more relaxing and we do not have to wait around for our turn in that cramped changing room!

Internet-based trading is now very big business indeed and many plus size women are choosing to order their clothes online; and this is no great surprise.  Well-respected companies likeSimplybe, provide their customers with plenty of measurements, so ordering something that just doesn’t fit is extremely unlikely.  But even if we do make a mistake when we are ordering, then it is simply a case of exchanging it for a different size.  We larger girls have never had it so good!



plus size

Why the Internet is the Best Place for Plus Size Clothes

By Andrea Petrou on October 1st, 2010

Sponsored post by J D Williams

At one time, plus size shoppers had a very poor choice when it came to clothes.  Not only would the garments on offer would be few and far between, but most of these were also terribly outdated.  Plus size coats or clothes would normally be tuckedaway in the darkest corner of the store whilst fitting rooms would be cramped and uncomfortable to use.

However, online shopping has completely changed all of that. Now the larger shopper can sit in the comfort of his/her own home and shop for clothing at any time of the day or night!  We all know what a wonderful place the internet is for groceries, cameras, mobile phones or computers, but it has also provided us with a fantastic choice of stylish plus size coats and clothes. How could anyone not love the World Wide Web???

Most online companies will supply their customers with plenty of accurate size measurements, so purchasing an item that doesnot fit is a pretty rare occurrence.  And even if we do buy an item in the wrong size, then returning it is a walk in the park.  All in all, the internet has made a tremendous difference to shopping forplus size coats or clothes!



Beauty, Gallery, plus size

Gallery: a bombshell wardbrobe for the curvier lady

By emilyborrett on July 7th, 2010

The other day I was flicking through magazines when I read a feature about the gorgeous plus-size model Crystal Renn (well known for appearing on Mark Fast’s catwalk shows last year). And she is gorgeous. When I compared her to the legions of tiny, waif-like models in all of the ad campaigns in the magazines that I read, she exuded sex appeal in a way that they didn’t.

Don’t think that I’m hating on all of you skinny twiglets out there, because I’m not; people often seem confuse being pro-curves and pro-health as an excuse to bully skinny girls. I think that women are beautiful whether they’re seven stone or fifteen stone. Each body shape has its assets, and while clothes hang off thin girls in a way I find beautiful, clothes cling to curvy girls, and that’s sexy. As a typical British size 10-12 girl, whose weight has fluctuated over the years, I’ve got big hips and a (very) generous bum. I’ve always felt disheartened by the sheer tininess of the girls that we see every day on billboards and advertisments. But the growing use of plus-size models in fashion is a glimmer of hope for the curvy girl – it shows that beauty ideals are changing again.

Consider the curvy starlets of yesterday such as Marilyn Monroe and Brigitte Bardot. Their beauty is still as widely celebrated and recognised as it was fifty years ago; they’re still pin-ups (ask any man, he’ll confirm this). They were never ashamed of their bodies or covered themselves up in dark, baggy clothes – like Crystal Renn, they showed off their womanly figures and looked all the more beautiful for it.

Here’s a gallery for you curvy girls with the best pieces to show off your best assets and feel beautiful. (Best enjoyed when savouring a piece of chocolate cake).



Features, Opinion, plus size

Fashion’s learning curves

By Andrea Petrou on March 1st, 2010

Crystal at Mark fast.jpg

Lauren Bravo Writes:
Thank God for Mark Fast. By putting plus-sized models on the mainstream catwalk for the second season running, the much-acclaimed knitwear designer has set some ripples stirring on the sea of planet fashion. He’s proved that a) it wasn’t just a gimmick the first time round, and b) that women with a bit of meat on them can still rock high fashion looks. We can have our cake, eat our cake, and still wear a sweater dress without Anna Wintour jumping out of nowhere and locking us in a cupboard.

Hurrah! Oh, joyful day! Fashion has a new form, and it’s Crystal Renn-shaped! I could spend the rest of the article waxing lyrical on the plus-sized supermodel; the size of her thighs, the power of her curves, the voluptuous va-va-voom that her presence brings to a runwazy or magazine cover. But that would be boring, and a lapse into hypocrisy – after all, where magazines have failed women so enormously in the last 100 years (though they’ve tried to compensate with a million free canvas shopping bags) is with their tireless focus on perfection.

Instead we should discuss how silly it is that we use the term ‘plus-sized’ for models no bigger than a 12. Or how ‘curvy’ is a compliment when discussing Beyonce, but becomes a velvet-cloaked insult when used about Natalie Cassidy. The battle is far from over. Like fashion itself, it seems that plus-sized acceptance must follow the traditional path of catwalk-to-glossy-magazine-to-boutique-to-less-glossy-magazine-to-high-street-to-us. So while Mark Fast’s contribution should be applauded and appreciated, it is only the first domino in a long line to be toppled.

It seems high-end magazines still won’t use normal-sized models unless they are: 1) Famous. Designers, editors, musicians, business tycoons and the wives of world leaders are all, from time to time, allowed to grace the hallowed pages with a little extra flesh on their bones. Largely because it makes the magazine look highbrow. Or 2) A gimmick. “Look at us! We’re using fat birds! Aren’t we liberal and accepting?” the cover will scream, just to leave us in no doubt that this model is a Special Exception. But other than that, the world of the glossies remains a parallel universe, one in which Lara Stone is considered rather a hefter.

Meanwhile in the land of real women, dressing shapelier bodies is still a confusing business. I mean, we have to pay Gok Wan his dues. He’s given us all a lovely self-esteem boost, shown us how to love our wobbly bits and introduced the word ‘breasticles’ into the vernacular of a nation. But do we really want to spend the rest of our lives poured into pencil skirts and elastic waist-cincher belts, like a secretary from a 50s B-movie? Of course we don’t. We’d never be able to run up stairs. We’d be the Daleks of the style world (who are, now I come to think of it, rather pear-shaped themselves).

So we need to release Gok’s iron grip on our Spanx and reclaim our natural waistlines. And while we’re at it, a stern word needs to be had with the designers of high street plus-sized ranges. It seems grossly unfair that, while so much effort has been put into trendy maternity ranges in recent times, plus-sized wear remains on the whole a hateful mess of wafty kaftans and misshapen denim – being as women are only pregnant for nine months at a time, while some will be a size 18 their whole lives.

Plus-sized ranges, as far as I can deduce, centre around one key, and terribly misjudged, item. The t-shirt. I can only imagine that the conversations in the ivory towers must go something like this: “What do fuller figured women want to wear?” “Well, they probably want to look a bit sporty… like they might do some exercise and stop being so fuller figured.” “Yes” “And obviously they don’t want anything with any shape…” “Obviously” “So I think what they really want to wear, probably, is a great big t-shirt.” “Yes! That must be it! But hang on, isn’t that a bit boring? Plus-sized women are meant to be jolly, aren’t they?” “Hmm… ok, we’ll put some diamantés and a big jolly slogan down the front.” “Perfect.”

Other main fails in the sphere of plus-sized design include: lack of proper sleeves. This extends beyond fuller figure ranges to the vast majority of womankind, who for whatever reasons (bingo wings, chicken skin, those little pockets of flab that squeeze out under your armpits) don’t want to expose our upper arms, forcing us into little cardies that make us feel like Lorraine Kelly. Then there’s lack of shape. Wearing enormous, crushed velvet marquees does NOT make one look smaller by comparison. The only people it works on are Jenni Murray, Dawn French and Dame Judi Dench (see: ‘famous people’, above). And finally, there’s compensating for lack of shape with diamantes and mimsy floral motifs. This isn’t a primary school craft project. Give the girls a waist, for pete’s sake.

And all that hasn’t even given me time to start on the high street’s failure to accommodate us Average Amys in the 12-16 range (other than to quickly say: we have BREASTS, deal with it! Giving us acres of extra hip fabric is not going to change that; we can’t move them down there). So yes, while Mark Fast has taken a small step for woman, we still need a giant leap for womankind. But hey, at least we can eat while we’re waiting for it to happen. Cake, anybody?



First Looks, plus size

First looks: Crystal Renn for V Magazine

By Andrea Petrou on February 25th, 2010

Crystal V March.jpg

Cystal Renn is flying the flag for plus sized women and models everywhere.

She appeared in last month’s V magazine’s plus sized edition and earlier this week donned a bodycon dress for Mark Fast’s LFW catwalk show. And she’s still going.

The successful plus sized model, who admitted she used to suffer with anorexia due to the pressure of trying to make it as a “normal” sized model, has once again made her way to the front cover of V’s next issue hitting the shelves next month.

Posing in an Agent Provocateur bra and Dolce & Gabbana knickers, she’s the epitome of real beauty in our eyes.



Celebrity Style, Features, Gallery, Models, plus size

Gallery: Inspirational plus size celebrities and models

By Andrea Petrou on December 21st, 2009

After reporting on Selfridges latest move to stop stocking plus size clothes we thought it was only right to show the retailer that we’re all not twiglets.

In the past few years a range of Hollywood celebs have shunned the size zero look and showed us that being a normal weight is perfectly acceptable.

Plus size models have also been on the covers of magazines and on the catwalk.

We’ve therefore put together a gallery of these inspirational women and we will be sending a link to Selfridges too.

Click on the picture below to begin the gallery.




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