Menu
Cart 0

RTW Explained: Why Size Inclusivity is Not Always Practiced

Posted by Betsy C on

We should all have clothes that fit. No one group should be left out. But they are. 

This is a problem not only limited to ready to wear, but we also hear the same discussion in the world of home sewing patterns. It’s an issue that encompasses both worlds. 

Women come in all shapes and sizes so why are there not clothes for all? It’s a crime that "Fill in the blank"——designer only goes up to a size 12. 

Trust me, the fashion industry (and independent sewing companies as well) hear loud and clear there is a huge market for bridging the size gap. However, there are obstacles in the way that aren’t so black and white. I'm going to focus on the plus size aspect of this issue, but the same principles can be applied to other categories like petites, talls or other specific fit initiatives- regardless of whatever size is chosen to start from.

Grading:

Anyone who thinks they can grade up a fitted bodice from a size 4 to a size 28 has no business making plus sizes. Yes, they may be saying they are inclusive but they are not going to fit well. It can be done for some styles, but 90% of the time you need a brand new pattern that is drafted specifically for a plus sized body. The plus size body has different proportions and fit considerations so anything above a 16- 18 really needs a fit specific to a different body type. 

Cost:

When you make a second pattern automatically your development costs and time invested double and can easily add up to many thousands of dollars more to add to the product development cost. 

  • Two patterns
  • Two samples (at least)
  • Two patterns for grading
  • Two separate model fittings on multiple occasions
  • Double the amount of fabric you need to buy for samples (or triple). 

Fabric Required to Mass Produce

Then there is the fabric. Plus sizes take more yardage and in some cases wastes more because the space they take up on a marker, leaves gaps that cannot be used. So before the designer even makes a sale, she is already counting on adding more cost to the fabric she is purchasing. For designers on a shoestring budget or those that work with very high end fabrics that cost $$$, it is a big investment gamble.  

Expertise 

Most RTW is produced overseas in countries that have no concept of what plus size looks like and have no point of reference. But yet we rely on them to make a garment that fits. Trying to develop a plus size range this way can be the stuff of nightmares and is not for the faint of heart.

Not everyone can make a plus size pattern. It’s an oddity but a reality. RTW is not that old (I'm talking around 1940/1950 ish). Drafting methods and formulas have been developed based on a traditional misses size 6 or 8. With a fairly proportional body this was easy to formulate. However, body shapes have changed dramatically in the past 50 years to include plus sizes (yes, there were before but that was probably more in the category of "custom"). With that in mind, if a patternmaker was taught to draft according to a size 6 they are used to approaching the fit from this point of view. Depending on the patternmakers eye, they may not know how to make the transition to plus size. Case in point- I spend a better part of my life (I'm not even being dramatic here) just fixing plus size patterns made by different patternmakers around the world. It was initially thought that if you showed them photos and described problems then they would know how to fix it. It didn’t work, so here is where I fit in as I work to improve patterns that often make the following assumptions:

  • Chest is a lot bigger in the front than the back
  • The front body needs to be wider in general 
  • Bust darts need to be especially deep
  • If her hips are big the rest of the leg must be also
  • If she’s bigger than her shoulders are wider

But here's the thing: I wouldn’t say that these are incorrect assumptions of a plus size body, but when it comes time to fit a pattern that looks like this, it’s going to be a hot mess on a live person. 

Plus size is not standard

Finding a plus size fit model is a hard task. When you get above a size 18 there are more figure types. Do you fit a pear shape or an upside down triangle? It’s hard to know what group to cater to. You can aim to fit many but you have to average it out. But how and where? This can be a hard call to make and each company decides who they want to cater to and it may not fit all plus sizes. Oftentimes year long studies are done to determine who a plus size customer actually is.

Every company that I have worked for has at one point been on the quest to find the right plus size fit model. A process that could take months, even in NYC where there are lots of agencies that represent plus fit models. The right ones are few and far between and you will pay top dollar. Typically a plus size fit model makes more than a misses model (so factor that back into the budget as well).

Will she buy?

I hear this from some of the smaller designers that have direct access to their customer base. The customer is in love with a style, but it is an investment so she wants to make sure she will get a lot of wear out of it. However, she’s planning on losing a few dress sizes and will come back after she’s lost the weight. She never does and the plus size dress hangs on the rack, and eventually the sale rack just to get rid of it. There are many women out there that embrace their size, but even more that are always looking to change it. 

Please don’t judge designers too harshly if they aren’t offering an extended size range. Most designers that I work with who have added larger sizes have done so slowly and thoughtfully to make sure they were putting the best product out there. It’s not just about grabbing a new corner of the market, it’s about doing it right and ensuring the business model can absorb the doubling of all supplies and labor.

 


Share this post



← Older Post Newer Post →


18 comments

  • This is one of the most sensible and well reasoned reflections I’ve read about why many pattern companies struggle to cater for a wide range of body sizes for sewists. It is a not insignificant challenge that confronts pattern makers when drafting and grading womens sewing patterns to accommodate the enormous variability in female body shape – the tall, short, narrow and wide combinations become manifold. This is why there are ready to wear and tailoring traditions in dressmaking. Women whose body proportions conform within a narrow range that became historically designated “average” will always find it more straightforward to buy sewing patterns that fit satisfactorily.
    I found Claires dismissive comment – “If people do not know how to fit the full range of bodies/create patterns for everyone then they can learn” – particularly ignorant and irritating and wanted to ask – what do you know about it? Well trained pattern makers do know how to “fit the full range of bodies”. That is our business, livelihood and skill. The professional patternmaker writing this blog has explained many of the reasons why pattern companies find it too challenging to provide very extensive size ranges. There is simply too wide a range of diversity to be properly catered too. You cannot proportionately grade between a classic size 6 to 30 and have a pattern that works. Applying non proportionate grading is where you end up getting into the complex area of tailoring and much labour intensive expense. You then have to publish multiple versions of the pattern pieces and adapt multiple versions of the making instructions. Where a pattern might one fit women who classifies herself as a size 26 it won’t fit another as her bust might be the same but her hips could be 10cm bigger or smaller than the other women.
    The reality is that’s its extremely difficult to apply conventional “grading rules” once a woman becomes larger than about a size 20. This is to do with the personal physiological tendencies of where individual women store fat on their bodies. In some it will concentrate around the midriff and they may still have relatively slender legs and arms. Others have more even distribution, so their torsos are straightish and cylindrical but the legs and arms are heavy. Some women have large busts and narrow hips, and vice versa…. The combinations are almost endless and it’s this diversity which makes a one-size-can-be-made-to-fit-all concept of a sewing pattern exceedingly difficult to be catered to.

    Pearl Red Moon on
  • I appreciate your reasoning here, but I think it’s faulty. How many bazillion times have we heard that the average size for women in the US is a size 14? If that is true, then how come every clothing designer doesn’t begin their design in a size 14? That would make great business sense. No, y’all don’t because we are all conditioned/brainwashed to think that thinner is better in every way, such as one " cannot be too rich or too thin". I know from what I’ve read, seen and been told that designing for average or curvy figures is not even taught in as part of fashion design curriculum. My memory is no longer great but I seem to recall over the years hearing quotes from several haute couture designers that they do not want “fat people” wearing their designs – “fat people” meaning average sized women as so many of their designs do not even go beyond a size 8. As I have over time become a truly fat person – a super plus size – I have seen how the more adipose tissue I have, the more difficult it is to get a good fit. Not only because of its “topography” but also because fat behaves differently than does bone and muscle; a garment that fits well while standing may need more wearing ease when sitting or moving because of the way fat compresses and/or spreads.

    I do wish there was a design or patternmaking curriculum that did focus on flattering the average and/or plus figure. Can you imagine the excitement that would be generated for clothing that looked fantastic on ordinary women? I mean, just LOOK at Kiyonna…….

    One more thing, men’s bodies are in no way as objectified as women’s bodies are and you can tell b/c almost always men’s clothes are produced in a far larger size range – it’s considered normal – AND their clothes have POCKETS. It’s a great big load of brainwashing IMO.

    This rant isn’t primarily directed at you – please do not take it personally. But I would ask that you might examine some of your assumptions more deeply, and perhaps consider making at least 1 of your designs originating on a size 14 and seeing what that does to your process.
    Helen Keniston Oney on
  • I have a lot of friends who are plus size with small bust! I’m going back to TAFE to learn pattern making and the changes that they are making! I intend to make pattern for my friends to help them out! I think it is durable to make plus size and still have style

    Annette Love on
  • Hey Betsy. Interesting post and even more interesting reaction over on IG. I am personlly a very plus size, pattern engineer of 35 years+, operate my own private fashion school and also am a Indie pattern designer ( so I do have street creds). I take my sizes up to a 26AU/22US/54EU and am considering offering one/two more outer size in my range ( my designs are largel woven). But there has been an underlying on-going problem – we all run tester calls for pattern road tests and post calls in various places – the biggest cry from the Indie designers themselves is that there is not alot of interest in the plus size market tester pool – they dont get responses for the tester phase of the pattern. So in some cases it is largely a case of a “rock and a hard place”. I would love for anyone with ideas how this can be solved so I can pass this on to my colleagues. Love to you all. Xx

    Ann on
  • I found this article very disturbing, these excuses are poor and made by people who object to putting in work.
    Larger people want to look as nice and well put together as those who are “standard” sizes and are also willing to spend the money.
    I think that in today’s world of accepting people for who they are means designers need to get out of there narrow minded world and realize that 90% of people out there aren’t "standard, being either, small, large tall or short

    Rose on

Leave a comment