The Palm Beach Post

Size 16: the new ‘average’

Women’s fashion begins to face facts: Americans are getting bigger.

- By Abha Bhattarai Washington Post

As soon as Heidi Zak studied the numbers, she knew it was time to sell a bigger bra.

Zak, founder of the online startup Third Love, spent three years building her line, which started with cup sizes A through E, and now goes through size K. The company offers 59 sizes, and is testing 15 more. But demand - especially for larger sizes - is only rising.

Consider, she says: More than 500,000 women remain on the company’s waiting list for bras in sizes like 44G and 46K.

“As soon as you look at the data, it’s clear: It’s a market that’s so underserve­d,” Zak said. “And ultimately it’s about one thing: Being inclusive and serving all women.”

Zak is among online retailers who are culling customer complaints, preference­s and measuremen­ts and arriving at the same conclusion: American women, who on average wear about a size 16, need bigger sizes.

Yet plus-size apparel makes up just a sliver of the clothing on the market. Internet start-ups, armed with reams of data and often more nimble than traditiona­l retailers, are filling that gap.

Instead of creating “plussize collection­s,” they are more often creating the same dress for every size - say, 0 to 36. They also are bucking long-held industry notions of what larger women should - and shouldn’t - wear, seizing on an opportunit­y that mainstream retailers have long ignored.

They’re clearly on to something: Sales of plus-size apparel have been on the upswing. They grew 6 percent, to $21.4 billion, last year, outpacing the 2 percent growth in the overall women’s clothing market, according to research firm NPD Group.

Stitch Fix, an online styling service, recently began offer- Emily Beining and Regina Marlow are both models at HSN, the TV retailer based in St. Petersburg. Neither is a standard model size 2, but HSN uses models of different shapes and sizes because the average American woman is now a size 16. Emily is a size 14, which used to be the average size of American women. Both models are wearing fashions by DG2 by Diane Gilman.

ing up to size 24W across 90 brands. EShakti, which offers customizab­le clothing in sizes 0 to 36W, has been steadily increasing its range with promising results: Sizes 14 and up account for 52 percent of the company’s sales.

And at online retailer ModCloth, nearly three-quarters of clothing is available in every size from XXS to 4X.

“A lot of brands think very narrowly about who their customer is,” said Matthew Kaness, ModCloth’s chief executive. “There’s this belief that plus-size customers simply don’t spend as much but that is only because of a lack of choice.”

A company survey, he says, found that 80 percent of plussize women would spend more on clothing if items were offered in their size. His sales indicate that, too: Plus-size shoppers buy 20 percent more frequently than other customers.

“Women and men have been getting heavier, but manufactur­ers haven’t kept up,” said Marc Cohen, director of retail studies at Columbia Business School. “Most retailers don’t even go there - or if they do, they’re very inconsiste­nt about their approach.”

Retailers have neglected those women for years, an oversight that many in the industry say comes down to discrimina­tion. Designer Prabal Gurung, whose celebrity clients include Oprah Winfrey and Melissa McCarthy, says he has always offered up to a size 22, but most retailers “typically don’t buy beyond a 14.”

“Progress in the industry has still been slow,” said Gurung, who has partnered with Lane Bryant to create a line for women sizes 10 to 28. “For the longest time, they have been pushed aside.”

And, designers and stylists say, the industry’s sense of “normal” has long been skewed by runway shows and high-fashion magazines filled with rail-thin women.

“The fashion industry still considers a woman who’s a size 12 or 14 ‘plus size,’ ” stylist and TV personalit­y Robert Verdi said. “I call that normal.”

It was by accident, Kaness says, that he realized the women’s apparel industry was in need of a shake-up.

Shortly after he took the helm at ModCloth in 2015, Kaness opened the company’s first pop-up stores. Every day, visitors asked the same question: “Where’s the plus section?”

“And the answer was, we didn’t have one,” Kaness said.

Instead, all sizes, from XS to 4X were grouped together, by style.

“People’s faces lit up when they heard that,” he said. “For a lot of them, that was the first time girlfriend­s, mothers and daughters, co-workers could shop together in the same store. That was the lightbulb for me.”

A few months later, he removed the “plus” section from the company’s website. In three years, Modcloth, which is now owned by Walmart, has nearly quadrupled its lineup of larger sizes.

That’s been possible, Kaness says, because the company primarily operates online. It keeps all its inventory in one warehouse in Pittsburgh, which means it’s not much of a problem to stock any given dress or T-shirt in nine sizes.

“We can constantly add sizes to every item without worrying about, ‘How many extra-smalls and 2Xs should I send to the Tallahasse­e store for the third week of August?’ ” he said. “That’s where e-commerce has an advantage in terms of serving a wider range of customers.”

But, he added, there are extra costs and labor involved with offering more sizes. A size 6 dress pattern, for example, can be used to create dresses in sizes 0 through 12. But larger sizes require a second prototype, which means the company has to design two pieces, cut two sets of patterns, and fit them on two models.

“Even though online it looks like we’re offering the same dress in size 2 or size 22, everything about those pieces is completely different,” Kaness added.

Another trend-driven retailer, Eloquii, introduces two new collection­s to its website each month. Since 2014 (after it parted ways with the Limited), the company has cut production time in half, and is also filling its racks with trendy, sometimes edgy, apparel. Its best sellers include a high-heel, over-theknee boot for $139.90 and a slim-fitted, ankle-length pant that sells for $89.90.

“The old-school thinking that our customer can’t wear stripes or shouldn’t wear large florals or, God forbid, a crop top to show her midriff - we don’t believe any of that,” chief executive Mariah Chase said. “We sell tons of off-the-shoulder tops. We sell tons of really-short shorts and crop tops.”

But even as mainstream retailers - Walmart, J.C. Penney and Old Navy among them - expand up to size 30, or 5x, sizes larger than that continue to be neglected. Lane Bryant, Gwynnie Bee and Avenue all top out at size 32.

“It’s really, really difficult to find fashionabl­e clothing above 3X or 4X,” said Debbie Christel, an assistant professor in Washington State University’s apparel and textiles department who describes herself as a “fat studies scholar.” “The thought within the industry is, if you want to wear fashionabl­e clothing, you’ll just have to lose weight. Not providing options for people because they’re a different size is not only discrimina­tion, it’s absolutely absurd.”

 ?? POST EMILY BERL / WASHINGTON ?? Members from the design and technical teams at ModCloth, Patrick Pettinato (from left), Meredith Petro and Jackie Lee, test two sizes of a dress, small and 2X, at the Los Angeles office of ModCloth. The online retailer offers all of its clothes in...
POST EMILY BERL / WASHINGTON Members from the design and technical teams at ModCloth, Patrick Pettinato (from left), Meredith Petro and Jackie Lee, test two sizes of a dress, small and 2X, at the Los Angeles office of ModCloth. The online retailer offers all of its clothes in...
 ?? JAN TUCKWOOD / THE PALM BEACH POST ?? Emily Beining (left) and Regina Marlow behind the scenes at HSN, modeling Diane Gilman’s DG2 fashions. Beining is a size 14.
JAN TUCKWOOD / THE PALM BEACH POST Emily Beining (left) and Regina Marlow behind the scenes at HSN, modeling Diane Gilman’s DG2 fashions. Beining is a size 14.
 ?? WASHINGTON POST PHOTOS BY EMILY BERL / ?? Shortly after he took the helm at ModCloth in 2015, Matthew Kaness opened the company’s first pop-up stores. Every day, visitors asked the same question: “Where’s the plus section?” “And the answer was, we didn’t have one,” Kaness said.
WASHINGTON POST PHOTOS BY EMILY BERL / Shortly after he took the helm at ModCloth in 2015, Matthew Kaness opened the company’s first pop-up stores. Every day, visitors asked the same question: “Where’s the plus section?” “And the answer was, we didn’t have one,” Kaness said.
 ??  ?? The design department of the Los Angeles office of ModCloth.
The design department of the Los Angeles office of ModCloth.

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