The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Will Twiggy’s new rocks be enough o put the sparks back into Marks?

- by Amy Oliver

‘ The monochrome trend is big for summer and ideal for a grownup Mod like me! Try it for the office ‘ or a smart garden party

A real shape shifter ... this is amazing for creating hour-glass ‘ curves, even on a twiglet!

This Sixties inspired swing dress is perfect for summer weddings... and certainly ‘ sparks fond memories for me ‘ This hot fuchsia dress with pretty lace sleeves will make you look a stunner from daytime until midnight at a summer wedding, and its ‘ secret weapon is its secret slimming panel

HER very name encapsulat­ed the stick-thin fashion ideals of the Swinging Sixties. Now, at 64, Twiggy is no longer the willowy size six waif who ‘ate like a horse’ and never gained weight – but instead a more shapely eight-and-a-half stone size ten. And she even admits to wearing support knickers, dieting and only liking her body ‘some days’.

Although she still looks fabulous, the news that even internatio­nal supermodel­s are not immune to filling out will be music to the ears of the vast majority of women who don’t have catwalk figures. But it is also the secret weapon that Marks and Spencer hopes can turn round their flagging fortunes on the high street.

When the Sixties style icon came out of modelling retirement a decade ago in an acclaimed advertisin­g campaign for M&S, there was an instant ‘Twiggy Effect’ – and the clothes she wore walked off the shelves, helping to boost the share price to its highest point in eight years.

Now her own online-only fashion collection is proving a bestseller for the store – a rare bright spot for the company which last week reported a dip in profits for the third year running, a problem exacerbate­d by a general slump in fashion sales.

The secret of her success is that the effects of time have given Twiggy a heightened appreciati­on of the fashion needs of ordinary women – which can be seen in the designs of her new summer collection, available online today.

In an exclusive preview for The Mail on Sunday, she reveals how she is determined to design for women who never knew what it was to be a ‘twiglet’. Indeed, her new M&S collection goes from a size eight to a size 22.

‘I think that’s only right,’ she says. ‘There are big people out there and they have to be able to buy clothes.

‘I do think that if you’re that size you should look at your diet but these people still have to buy clothes and shouldn’t be left out.

‘Also, it’s Marks’ policy to do that size. It’s not fair when you go into a shop and the sizes only go up to a UK 14.’

While the rest of the high street is littered with sleeveless frocks that require the toned biceps of Michelle Obama, Twiggy has made sure nearly all of her designs have sleeves.

Much more flattering for Ms Average. Her fuchsia number with long, lace sleeves will be particular­ly popular for summer weddings.

Moreover her range of sensibly hued T-shirts have sleeves that come nearly down to the elbow – a neat solution for those of us afflicted by bingo-wings.

Twiggy admits that in years gone by M&S’s women’s offering was ‘a bit mummish’ but insists it is now ‘brilliant’ and ‘so good for the price’. She won’t reveal her own sales figures but says the line continues to do very well, ‘touch wood’.

‘We did a blue suede biker jacket for spring which sold out within two days. Little did we know we could have ordered ten times the amount,’ she says. ‘We’ve had a sequined jacket that has been in most of the collection­s in different colours. You can wear it at any age. I never put an age on my clothes and always say the range is from 18 to 80.’

WHEN we meet, her stillfabul­ous legs are encased in her own Twiggy For M&S Collection black jeggings – a cross between leggings and jeans. But instead of the on-trend low-cut style, they are cut over the waist, which serves to keep her everso-slight muffin top expertly hidden.

‘They’re not bloody hipsters so they don’t dig in,’ Twiggy admits candidly. ‘Even when I was skinny, I hated hipsters: they cut into my hip bone and were really painful. I want clothes that help, that are easy, not precious.’

Her autumn collection will also feature the same very tight, very hot pink dress that she wore to her 35-year-old daughter Carly’s wedding last year.

She confirms with a laugh that she went on the ‘fabulous’ 5.2 diet – in which you eat normally for five days and then for two days restrict yourself to 500 calories – in order to look her best in it. And the support knickers also helped.

‘The 5:2 is so doable because you eat, you don’t starve,’ Twiggy says. ‘I lost about 8lb in the end.’

And the support pants which many see as a garment of torture? ‘Oh yes, I’ve got a mixture. They’re so comfortabl­e actu- ally,’ she says. ‘I’ve had to wear old fashioned corsets for period dramas before. They’re really good for your diet because if you eat a big meal and then have to get into a corset it’s agony.’

Her admission that she now has to watch her figure carefully is a far cry from the accusation­s of promoting anorexia she endured when she was first discovered at 16 in 1966.

‘I did look different, like an alien being and was eve clear that I ate and ate says. ‘Of co get older. I’ what I eat n like healthy

‘Potatoes a though. I ca You know t you in resta

‘ I rely on LBDs as much as the next woman, and mine is ‘ a must-have with its flattering vertical pleat

You’ll love the way this skirt swishes, it feels so free, and my gorgeous silky T-shirts genuinely go with ‘ everything – dress them up or down

I might have been known for the miniskirt, but I have fallen in love with sophistica­ted maxis. Mine ‘ has a hankerchie­f hem that keeps it youthful

This classic Sixties number is brilliant for cocktails and dancing ‘ and is extremely flattering around the middle

er so thin, but I made it very I wasn’t anorexic and that I and nothing happened,’ she ourse that changes when you m much more careful about now. But I’m lucky because I y food. and bread are my downfall, n’t give up really good bread. hat crusty bread they bring aurants? Oh. My. God. They always bring it when you’re waiting for your food and you’re starving so you fill your face with it.’

But Twiggy is also shocked by how much larger people are today. ‘The average size now is UK 14/16 whereas when I was younger it was 12/14,’ she says seriously. ‘You want to go to Disneyland. I’ve never seen such big bottoms in my life. It’s terrifying,’ she says.

‘I find it upsetting because those peo- ple are probably not going to make it, yet they still walk along eating cream cakes and doughnuts and ice creams and drinking huge buckets of Coca-Cola.

‘And what happens in America usually happens here too. The rise in obesity is really sad. There are so many fast food places that are cheap and easy.

‘When I was growing up in the 1950s we weren’t rich by any stretch of the imaginatio­n, but mum used to go to the shops every second day and buy fresh produce from the greengroce­rs and we ate what was in season. Of course, occasional­ly we all eat something rubbish, but I do try not to.’

When it comes to design, she is much more strict. ‘I am a perfection­ist about it and am also very bossy, but we laugh a lot. After the first fitting and we’ve laughed and cried and screamed and thrown it out the window, we then tweak and pin or say this fabric is really not as it should be. Then we go off for another sample and I try it all on again.

‘It’s serious stuff, but fashion should be fun. I’ve got to an age where if something doesn’t have a fun element I don’t see the point in doing it. Life’s too short.’

It’s easy to see why M&S are redeployin­g their most effective weapon.

But can the Twiggy Effect again revive the company’s fortunes?

 ??  ?? Lace dress, £59. Suede mid heel T-bar sandals, £45
Lace dress, £59. Suede mid heel T-bar sandals, £45
 ??  ?? Swing shift dress, £59, Leather T-Bar Sandals, £45
Swing shift dress, £59, Leather T-Bar Sandals, £45
 ??  ?? Sleeveless shift dress, £59. Suedepeep toe court shoes,£49.50
Sleeveless shift dress, £59. Suedepeep toe court shoes,£49.50
 ??  ?? Colour block shift dress, £49.50. Leather stiletto peep toe court shoes, £49.50
Colour block shift dress, £49.50. Leather stiletto peep toe court shoes, £49.50
 ??  ?? Swing shift dress, £59. Colour block shoulder bag, £29.50. Suede mid heel T-barsandals, £45 Longline T-shirt £19.50. Textured maxi skirt £45. Suede mid heel T-bar sandals £45 Sequin embellishe­d shift dress £59. Suede peep toe court shoes, £49.50
Swing shift dress, £59. Colour block shoulder bag, £29.50. Suede mid heel T-barsandals, £45 Longline T-shirt £19.50. Textured maxi skirt £45. Suede mid heel T-bar sandals £45 Sequin embellishe­d shift dress £59. Suede peep toe court shoes, £49.50
 ??  ?? Short sleeve T-shirt £19.50. Flippy skirt, £45. Suede peep toe court shoes, £49.50. Faux snakeskin cross-body bag, £35
Short sleeve T-shirt £19.50. Flippy skirt, £45. Suede peep toe court shoes, £49.50. Faux snakeskin cross-body bag, £35

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