Body Image – Signature9 http://198.46.88.49 Lifestyle Intelligence Sat, 24 Jul 2010 09:17:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.4 Daphne Guiness Takes on Tracksuits and Unhealthy Round Bodies http://198.46.88.49/style/fashion/daphne-guiness-takes-on-tracksuits-and-unhealthy-round-bodies http://198.46.88.49/style/fashion/daphne-guiness-takes-on-tracksuits-and-unhealthy-round-bodies#respond Fri, 23 Jul 2010 13:52:15 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?p=14538 The Daily Mail caught up with Daphne Guinness at a party in Mayfair, and the well-known heiress to the Guinness brewing fortune had some interesting comments on current fashion and body health trends. Guinness has made quite a few fashion headlines recently as the face of Nars Cosmetics’ fall campaign and savior to Isabella Blow’s prized wardrobe collection, but the 42-year-old daughter of Lord Moyne is apparently appalled by the way people dress and their extreme silhouettes.

Guiness is not a fan of the tracksuit look...

“You can tell the state of ­civilization by the way people dress,” she said. “If the people who fought two World Wars came back to 2010 and saw all of us running around in tracksuits, what would they think? It is just being sloppy. And it is not about the money, it is a mindset.”

We think Guinness has a point. Walk down any New York City street on any given day and you are bound to see tons of sloppy-looking pedestrians. We all have days where comfort clothes are more appealing than structured clothing, but there are limits. Particularly when it comes to what you wear to work, how you present yourself is a big part of how you are perceived. In this economy, every little bit of self-marketing may help you to keep your job – unless you work at Citibank, but that’s another story.

Guinness also said she’s not a fan of unhealthy round bodies.

“I have nothing against people who are round,” she said. “I am far too thin, for ­example. I’d really love to put on a few pounds. But I certainly think some ­people look tremendously unhealthy — and quite unhappy actually.”

Amen. We know a lot is made of the too-thin images of women we see in the media, and all of that is warranted given that being seriously underweight can be as unhealthy as being seriously overweight.  But Guinness may be on the mark about heavier people being unhappy. A recent Dutch study found that obesity increases the risk of depression by 55 percent. {Reuters}

One of the doctors involved noted “[being] overweight and obesity, can induce low self-esteem and body dissatisfaction, especially in Western countries where thinness is often considered a beauty ideal. Both low self-esteem and body dissatisfaction are known to increase the risk of depression.”

While fashion only goes so far, perhaps more stylish options for larger sizes would help with both problems. We’ve said before and we’ll continue to say, not everyone is meant to have the same shape. Some people are naturally thin and perfectly healthy, some people are naturally fat and perfectly healthy, and there are plenty of healthy and unhealthy shapes in between the two ends. And at all ranges of the size spectrum, there are people who are never satisfied with their bodies. Celebrating different body types as beautiful through flattering clothing may seem superficial, but it would be a start.

FYI, Daphne, you’re beautiful, and if you’re just not meant to pick up any more pounds we like you as you are.

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Cindy Tells It Like It Is http://198.46.88.49/living/cindy-tells-it-like-it-is http://198.46.88.49/living/cindy-tells-it-like-it-is#respond Sun, 22 Nov 2009 17:08:32 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?p=6561

Last week, Hannah Pool from UK newspaper The Guardian sat down with [still super!] supermodel Cindy Crawford to discuss the current fashion industry, and one quotation struck us as particularly poignant, especially in light of recent backlash against Karl and his “fat mummies” and Kate and her taste for skinny:

We as the consumers, we as the women, have the power.  If you don’t like something, don’t buy it.  Don’t buy the magazine if you don’t like what it says.  If you don’t like the image a brand is putting out, don’t buy it.  What I really don’t agree with is people who complain about it but still support it. You’re giving your power away. If people don’t want skinny models, stop buying the magazine with the skinny model, and believe me those magazines will change fast. It’s business.

We agree, Cindy: it’s one thing to recognize problems within society and the media, but recognizing is not enough if we are not willing to change our habits and realize that we are the ones who are ultimately in control.

Read the full story {The Guardian}

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