USA TODAY US Edition

‘Project Runway’ breaks barriers

Season will feature variety of body types

- Cara Kelly

“Where are these clothes that women can buy?”

Tim Gunn has been asking this semi-rhetorical question about plus-size fashion for years. The longtime Project Runway mentor and former Liz Claiborne chief creative officer is on a mini-crusade to remedy the lack of body inclusivit­y in the industry — the lingering disparity of designer

garments in sizes above a 12.

“That’s my challenge to the industry,” he says. “Women want choices, they want to be able to just decide for themselves what they want to wear instead of having a limited number of items they can choose.”

Gunn won a major victory with Season 16 of the Lifetime designer competitio­n series (premiering Thursday, 8 ET/PT), which includes models who range from sizes 0 to 22 for the first time in its 13-year history. Models are assigned to contestant­s by judges and the production staff, and they’re rotated frequently, so all competitor­s are met with a variety of body types through weekly challenges.

“I’ve been wanting to do this

for quite a number of seasons,” Gunn says. “To be blunt, the network has been quite nervous about it. The whole fashion industry is nervous, despite the fact that people are now talking about size inclusivit­y.”

What, exactly, are they nervous about, when according to a study from the Internatio­nal Journal of Fashion Design, Technology and Education, the average American woman is a size 16?

For designers on the show, it’s thinking about fit and not just a sample-size mannequin, a skill that’s not easily mastered with 24 to 48 hours on the clock.

“I think the designers wanted to flee,” Gunn says. “We didn’t tell them in advance.”

Some struggled, including con-

testant Brandon Kee, who has a background in menswear and was visibly nervous during the model assignment­s. But Kee and his fellow designers largely succeeded in their first assignment, creating a red carpet-ready look.

And, the dreaded “real women” episode, a perennial challenge that tasks designers with creating pieces for non-models, took on a different tone.

“The work was the best it had ever been,” Gunn says. “They learned something that is so beneficial to their future, and that’s invaluable.”

That’s certainly the case with Runway’s most notable alum, Christian Siriano, who has seamlessly included models of various sizes in his recent runway shows,

and answered a call from Leslie Jones for a red-carpet gown after the Ghostbuste­rs actress said no designers would dress her 6-foot frame.

But Jones’ plight didn’t shock Gunn, who recalls plus-size women asking him at Liz Claiborne why the industry was turning its back on them.

“I’d take this back to design directors at the brands,” he says, and “they would say, ‘I’m not interested in her.’ ”

But he hopes that as designers show greater body diversity on runways and in fashion spreads, a sea of change will come.

For now, the variety in models on the show is a one-time deal, but Gunn says “we just have to keep doing it.”

 ?? BARBARA NITKE, LIFETIME ??
BARBARA NITKE, LIFETIME
 ?? BARBARA NITKE, LIFETIME ?? Project Runway Season 16 features models who range from sizes 0 to 22 for the first time in the show’s history, a change mentor Tim Gunn is delighted about.
BARBARA NITKE, LIFETIME Project Runway Season 16 features models who range from sizes 0 to 22 for the first time in the show’s history, a change mentor Tim Gunn is delighted about.

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