Manila Bulletin

Fashion on upward curve

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NEW YORK, United States (AFP) — For years, images of impossibly slim, gorgeous, blemish-free women have filled fashion magazines, billboards and television screens.

Now, 26-year-old British model Iskra Lawrence is waging war on unattainab­le beauty standards in the fashion world, flexing her might on a social media fueling diversity.

She is among a growing number of plus-size models finding fame and calling themselves body activists, promoting health and wellbeing. She also refuses to allow clients to photoshop any of her images.

“The whole concept of Photoshop is an illusion,” Lawrence tells AFP during a rare spot of downtime before jetting off on her latest shoot, this time to a windswept beach in Iceland.

“They’re not flaws. They’re part of your body. We were just convinced by society and the media that there was something wrong with them.”

In Britain, around 57 percent of women have an above average body mass index. In the United States, that figure rises to 62 percent, amd the average American woman is a size 14-16.

Lawrence averages a US size 10 to 12, yet for years was told she was too fat to model. A sample size on the runway can be as small as zero.

But change is afoot. Ashley Graham, who last year became the first “curve” model on the cover of the annual “Swimsuit Issue” of magazine “Sports Illustrate­d” is on the cusp of becoming a household name.

In February, she became the first curve model to walk for Michael Kors at Fashion Week. This season, she hosted a fashion awards night and Sunday night walked again for Prabal Gurung in a show with Gigi Hadid.

It’s not just models. Popular culture is suddenly full of strong women proud of their curves from singers Adele and Beyonce to comedians Amy Schumer and Melissa McCarthy, and tennis star Serena Williams.

Following repeated scandals about anorexia, French holding companies LVMH and Kering, which own dozens of top labels from Christian Dior to Saint Laurent, just days ago pledged to ban size zero models from their advertisin­g and catwalk shows.

Now based in New York, Lawrence jumps on a plane multiple times a week, has starred in campaigns for American Eagle and its Aerie lingerie line, and has close to four million followers on Instagram.

Six years ago, she says a London booker laughed in her face and told her she’d never get to New York to work.

“That hurt,” she remembers. Since then, she was signed by JAG Models, an agency set up in 2013 to represent larger models, walked in New York Fashion Week and had a unretouche­d billboard in Times Square.

“Seeing those images raw and real really helps people understand they don’t need to be perfect and they’re good enough as they are,” she says.

Lawrence has also taken her message to schools in Britain and US colleges to promote good physical, emotional and mental health.

At least 30 million people of all ages and genders suffer from an eating disorder in the United States, according to The National Associatio­n of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders.

“Every day on social media, I get these DMs from girls saying I’ve saved their lives from eating disorders or suicidal thoughts. It’s a wonderful, positive movement,” Lawrence says.

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