Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the Lands End gray haired women that is in the catalogs is gorgeous. I hope I age like her.
As for plus size, I dislike when the plus model is first picture. I can’t tell if it only plus size. Very large curve distort the clothes too. I can’t tell how the fabric is supposed to drape
Well now you know how plus sized or curvier women feel when the models are only stick straight with teeny tiny boobs. We have no idea how clothes are going to look on women with real figures when they only display them on toothpicks!!! I can't tell how the fabric is supposed to drape because it just hangs there.
Actually on very thin models, you see exactly how the clothes are meant to drape, like seeing the clothes on a hanger. Then you can envision your body and your unique curves. It is hard to do the reverse. If i see a pleated tennis skirt stretched out on a size 20..I have no idea how the fabric is meant to look and drape.
What a load of crap. GTFOOH

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the Lands End gray haired women that is in the catalogs is gorgeous. I hope I age like her.
As for plus size, I dislike when the plus model is first picture. I can’t tell if it only plus size. Very large curve distort the clothes too. I can’t tell how the fabric is supposed to drape
Well now you know how plus sized or curvier women feel when the models are only stick straight with teeny tiny boobs. We have no idea how clothes are going to look on women with real figures when they only display them on toothpicks!!! I can't tell how the fabric is supposed to drape because it just hangs there.
Actually on very thin models, you see exactly how the clothes are meant to drape, like seeing the clothes on a hanger. Then you can envision your body and your unique curves. It is hard to do the reverse. If i see a pleated tennis skirt stretched out on a size 20..I have no idea how the fabric is meant to look and drape.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the Lands End gray haired women that is in the catalogs is gorgeous. I hope I age like her.
As for plus size, I dislike when the plus model is first picture. I can’t tell if it only plus size. Very large curve distort the clothes too. I can’t tell how the fabric is supposed to drape
Well now you know how plus sized or curvier women feel when the models are only stick straight with teeny tiny boobs. We have no idea how clothes are going to look on women with real figures when they only display them on toothpicks!!! I can't tell how the fabric is supposed to drape because it just hangs there.
Actually on very thin models, you see exactly how the clothes are meant to drape, like seeing the clothes on a hanger. Then you can envision your body and your unique curves. It is hard to do the reverse. If i see a pleated tennis skirt stretched out on a size 20..I have no idea how the fabric is meant to look and drape.
Clothing is made to drape differently on different sizes. If a designer is cutting a 0 and a size 20 the same way, they have no business calling themselves a designer.
NP. What are you talking about? This is mass production garments we're talking about, not a made to measure piece.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the Lands End gray haired women that is in the catalogs is gorgeous. I hope I age like her.
As for plus size, I dislike when the plus model is first picture. I can’t tell if it only plus size. Very large curve distort the clothes too. I can’t tell how the fabric is supposed to drape
Well now you know how plus sized or curvier women feel when the models are only stick straight with teeny tiny boobs. We have no idea how clothes are going to look on women with real figures when they only display them on toothpicks!!! I can't tell how the fabric is supposed to drape because it just hangs there.
Actually on very thin models, you see exactly how the clothes are meant to drape, like seeing the clothes on a hanger. Then you can envision your body and your unique curves. It is hard to do the reverse. If i see a pleated tennis skirt stretched out on a size 20..I have no idea how the fabric is meant to look and drape.
Clothing is made to drape differently on different sizes. If a designer is cutting a 0 and a size 20 the same way, they have no business calling themselves a designer.
NP. What are you talking about? This is mass production garments we're talking about, not a made to measure piece.
Anonymous wrote:They are TRYING to make her look bad. She needs her hair up and to wear colors and styles that suit her. Everything she wears looks so harsh. Why even include her if you’re going to make her wear such unflattering colors?
Anonymous wrote:I mean... skinny= aged face. She has a lot of facial lines but her bod is great. The pulled back hair is harsh on her- it looks good down. I don't know that an updo will in any way make her look youthful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many of the Athleta models make me cringe and not even want to consider their clothing. I am all for "inclusive" but...
You’re all for inclusive but you’re actually not?
I like being able to see what clothes will look like on a body like mine.
I don’t. The older woman is gorgeous, but companies are using very overweight women and the clothes look horrible! I guess it’s helpful to see in advance that the clothes will look crappy on fat people…but is it helping sales? Probably not.
+1. Clothes look awful on the overweight models. I take one look and I don’t even want to consider those tights or the shirts. I’m not skinny either but just average.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the Lands End gray haired women that is in the catalogs is gorgeous. I hope I age like her.
As for plus size, I dislike when the plus model is first picture. I can’t tell if it only plus size. Very large curve distort the clothes too. I can’t tell how the fabric is supposed to drape
Well now you know how plus sized or curvier women feel when the models are only stick straight with teeny tiny boobs. We have no idea how clothes are going to look on women with real figures when they only display them on toothpicks!!! I can't tell how the fabric is supposed to drape because it just hangs there.
Actually on very thin models, you see exactly how the clothes are meant to drape, like seeing the clothes on a hanger. Then you can envision your body and your unique curves. It is hard to do the reverse. If i see a pleated tennis skirt stretched out on a size 20..I have no idea how the fabric is meant to look and drape.
No -- the bust alone is really difficult to figure out when a model is an A cup.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many of the Athleta models make me cringe and not even want to consider their clothing. I am all for "inclusive" but...
You’re all for inclusive but you’re actually not?
I like being able to see what clothes will look like on a body like mine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the Lands End gray haired women that is in the catalogs is gorgeous. I hope I age like her.
As for plus size, I dislike when the plus model is first picture. I can’t tell if it only plus size. Very large curve distort the clothes too. I can’t tell how the fabric is supposed to drape
Well now you know how plus sized or curvier women feel when the models are only stick straight with teeny tiny boobs. We have no idea how clothes are going to look on women with real figures when they only display them on toothpicks!!! I can't tell how the fabric is supposed to drape because it just hangs there.
Actually on very thin models, you see exactly how the clothes are meant to drape, like seeing the clothes on a hanger. Then you can envision your body and your unique curves. It is hard to do the reverse. If i see a pleated tennis skirt stretched out on a size 20..I have no idea how the fabric is meant to look and drape.
Clothing is made to drape differently on different sizes. If a designer is cutting a 0 and a size 20 the same way, they have no business calling themselves a designer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the Lands End gray haired women that is in the catalogs is gorgeous. I hope I age like her.
As for plus size, I dislike when the plus model is first picture. I can’t tell if it only plus size. Very large curve distort the clothes too. I can’t tell how the fabric is supposed to drape
Well now you know how plus sized or curvier women feel when the models are only stick straight with teeny tiny boobs. We have no idea how clothes are going to look on women with real figures when they only display them on toothpicks!!! I can't tell how the fabric is supposed to drape because it just hangs there.
Actually on very thin models, you see exactly how the clothes are meant to drape, like seeing the clothes on a hanger. Then you can envision your body and your unique curves. It is hard to do the reverse. If i see a pleated tennis skirt stretched out on a size 20..I have no idea how the fabric is meant to look and drape.
Clothing is made to drape differently on different sizes. If a designer is cutting a 0 and a size 20 the same way, they have no business calling themselves a designer.