Advertisement

Home Page 5075

Why you can’t find plus-size clothes

Why you can't find plus-size clothes

Australian designer Leona Edmiston has a plus-size range. Photography by Liz Ham. Styling by Mattie Cronan.

The average Australian woman is a size 16, but if you head on to the high street you’ll be lucky to find anything bigger than a 14.

So what’s going on? Why isn’t someone plugging this gaping hole in the market?

“There’s this bizarre mindset among some of the designers that says catering for anyone beyond a 12 is somehow damaging their brand. I cannot get my head around it,” says Georgina Safe, fashion editor of The Sydney Morning Herald.

“I don’t know whether the term ‘plus-size’ is even applicable anymore because the average body shape and size for women is teetering on what would be classified as plus-size now.

“There are some designers who do delve beyond a 12 or 14, but they might sell it online, they sell it quietly, almost in the outlet store. They won’t put it in their flagship designer boutiques. It’s as if it’s something that’s not to be talked about.”

Related: Dressing Chrissie Swan

Leona Edmiston is one of the few designers who does cater for bigger ladies. She creates pretty retro-inspired pieces for “all women who love to wear gorgeous frocks” and last year introduced her own plus-size range.

“We had noticed that, in our boutiques, our size 4 [Australian size 16] was quite often the first size to sell out,” says general manager, Melissa Macalyk.

“We trialled the plus sizes online, where they had great success, and now continue to supply these in our main range boutiques.”

And while much of the designer world seems obsessed with creating sexy outfits for girls, there are Australian designers — such as Carla Zampatti and New Zealander Kate Sylvester — who are making great pieces for older women.

“My ideal customer is a woman who is 30s to 40s, creative, intelligent and not obsessed with fashion. She’s more concerned with looking beautiful and stylish,” says Sylvester, whose range of individual dresses and separates is both wearable and unique, and actually appeals to all ages.

Despite this, Sylvester’s sizing stops at 14, but she says she simply doesn’t have the demand for larger sizes and would increase her range if customers asked her to.

Carla Zampatti’s beautifully tailored classic lines in eveningwear, pant suits, shirts and jackets are renowned for flattering women’s bodies. Her sizing goes up to 18 in some styles and 16 in others, and like Sylvester she says she hasn’t had the demand for a bigger size range.

As for size ranges, bigger women are clearly not a priority for a lot of the high street brands, even though they make up the majority of the marketplace.

A Country Road size XL (its largest) is a 16, Marcs, Witchery and Cue stop at 14, Jigsaw and Big W’s Emerson brand at 16, David Lawrence, Jacqui-E and Sussan run to 18.

And while there are a clutch of specific plus-size brands, such as Autograph, TS14+, Big W’s Avella and Myer’s rather conservative Big Is Beautiful range, Sportscraft does push to a size 22 with some of its range and Target runs to size 26 in some lines.

For Bridget Veals, Merchandising Director at Webster Holdings, who own Marcs, David Lawrence and Jigsaw, plus size is “a speciality field”, which, at the moment, they’re not embarking upon.

In pictures: What’s wrong with plus-size bodies anyway?

Here at The Weekly, we fight to get larger sizes of upcoming collections to feature on models that reflect normal women’s shapes, but they are rarely available.

It’s true designing for curvy larger bodies does demand a different aesthetic and you can’t just convert size 10 to size 22 without considering the cut and the style, but surely the smart move for a designer who wants longevity would be to start cutting their cloth a bit differently and shouting it from the rooftops.

Read more of this story in the July issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Do you have trouble finding plus-size clothing? Do you think it’s time the Australian fashion started catering for larger ladies?

Subscribe to The Australian Women’s Weekly and receive a FREE Nude by Nature Gift pack, valued at over $80.

Video: Plus-size style

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5075

Paul Howes: My gut-wrenching adoption secret

Union boss Paul Howes is tipped to be a future Labor leader, but just 16 years ago he was living on the streets after his adoption "happy ending" soured. Here, he shares his story.
Paul Howes: My gut-wrenching adoption secret

Paul Howes. Photography by Nick Scott. Styling by Mattie Cronan.

I’ve known union boss Paul Howes for a few years, but it wasn’t until last year, talking to him and his wife Lucy about The Weekly’s campaign to make adoption easier for Australian couples, that I learned his story.

Paul was adopted. He was born Benjamin Patrick on August 23, 1981, to a 21-year-old woman who surrendered him reluctantly.

But Paul’s adopted family didn’t bring the happiness the young woman would have hoped for.

Related: Adoption laws must change

His adoptive parents divorced when he was young, and when his mother re-married, he didn’t get along with his step-father. When he was 14, he was living on the streets.

His is one of the great success stories — from living rough, he rose to the head of the Australian Workers Union, and a potential future Labor leader.

When he became an adult, and could afford it, Paul set out to look for his birth mother. It took him five years and thousands of dollars.

After much searching, he found her; she was living in the next suburb, with children of her own. Meeting her, he says, was one of the most “gut-wrenching” moments of his life.

He learned she had kept baby photos for years. She would cry for a week around his birthday. The relationship between mother and son is new, but strong.

Related: An adoption success story

Paul told me his story last year, but he and Lucy thought for many months before they decided to share it. Their decision was prompted, in part, by Paul’s strong feelings about the state of adoption in Australia.

He believes, like The Weekly, that it should be easier for couples to adopt: that there should be one body to handle all queries, rather than many in every state, and that it should be free.

Read more of this story in the July issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Do you have an adoption story? Share with us below

Video: Deborah Lee Furness’s adoption battle

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5075

Our advice for Julia Gillard

Our advice for Julia Gillard

Photography by Steven Chee. Styling by Judith Cook and Mattie Cronan.

Six of Australia’s most admired women give their advice for Prime Minister Julia Gillard and reveal their stance on Opposition Leader Tony Abbott’s policies on women’s issues.

Carrie Bickmore, 31

Carrie is a co-host of The Project on Network Ten. She lost her husband Greg to cancer in 2010 and has a son, Oliver.

Advice for Julia Gillard: “I wouldn’t profess to know how hard it would be run the country, so I am not sure I should be giving any advice. If I had to say anything, I would say to Julia to try and stay as positive as possible and to stand by the things she believes in — not easy in the world of politics.”

Tony Abbott’s women’s policies: “It’s hard to know what the true views of our leaders are when they so often just follow the party line, but it would be fair to say that Tony Abbott needs to do a bit of work to get the girls back on side.”

Kirstie Clements, 50

The former editor of Vogue Australia started working at the magazine 25 years ago as a receptionist. After losing her job in May, Kirstie is now working on a book about her time in magazines.

Advice for Julia Gillard: “As far as her style is concerned, as long as she looks professional and conservative, then the style of her dress or jacket is irrelevant. She’s the prime minister — it’s not for us to dress her like a doll. I witnessed her stand up to a group of male News Limited editors who were anti-Gillard and she was incredibly impressive. She more than held her own.”

Tony Abbott’s women’s policies: “One of my core beliefs is in a woman’s right to choose [an abortion]. Abbott has an entirely opposing view. I can’t move past this. His ideas about chastity and him being threatened by homosexuality are so out of touch with current society, it’s astounding. What does this have to do with politics?”

Jana Wendt, 56

Jana was a television presenter and reporter on the Nine Network’s 60 Minutes and Sunday, and Dateline on SBS. She now writes books and is working on her first novel.

Advice for Julia Gillard: “I try not to offer prime ministers advice! In the case of Julia Gillard, she seems to have received enough advice already — most of it bad.”

Tony Abbott’s women’s policies: “Tony Abbott’s paid parental leave scheme is, on the face of it, extremely generous — six months leave for the stay-at-home parent on the mother’s full wage. The businesses that will be required to pay for it might say it’s a little too generous.”

Leila McKinnon, 39

Leila is co-host of Weekend Today on the Nine Network and will help co-host the network’s Olympic coverage in London next month. She is pregnant with her first child.

Advice for Julia Gillard: “Oh, dear. I have to say I admire her fortitude and persistence, but what a precarious position. I don’t think anyone could advise anybody out of that mess.”

Tony Abbott’s women’s policies: “I found his description of a woman’s virginity as a “gift” very odd. When it comes to policy, I am pro-choice, but I think he’s right in saying he would like to see fewer abortions. I do question whether the possible use of RU486 [the medical abortion pill] was properly investigated.”

Kate Waterhouse, 28

Kate is a member of the Waterhouse racing dynasty and style and fashion editor at The Sun-Herald. She married her long-time partner, former NRL footballer Luke Ricketson, in June.

Advice for Julia Gillard: “If anything, I think she listens to bad advice, so I would advise her to stand on her own two feet and let the public see the strong, true leader she can be for the most fortunate country in the world.”

Tony Abbott’s women’s policies: “I think Tony Abbott is old-fashioned in his views. To publicly say that he urges women to save their virginity for marriage disconnects him from today’s youth.”

Bianca Spender, 35

Bianca is a fashion designer and the daughter of designer Carla Zampatti and barrister and former politician John Spender.

Advice for Julia Gillard: After having watched my father, I recognise politics is extremely complicated and being prime minister is a difficult role.

Tony Abbott’s policies: I support the government’s position on the environment — it is important for our future.

Read more of this story in the July issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Subscribe to The Australian Women’s Weekly and receive a FREE Nude by Nature Gift pack, valued at over $80.

Video: Behind-the-scenes on the Australian Women’s Weekly’s shoot with Julia Gillard

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5075

Baden-Clay: The murder that rocked Australia

Allison Baden-Clay: The murder that rocked Australia

Allison and Gerard Baden-Clay on their wedding day.

The beauty queen wife. The successful husband. And the three sweet little girls, whose lives will never be the same after their father was accused of murdering their mother.

Queensland is gripped by the case of Allison Baden-Clay, the young mother whose body was found on the side of a creek 10 days after her husband reported she failed to return after a walk.

Allison’s disappearance devastated the tight Brisbane community that had held the Baden-Clays in such high esteem. They were further shocked when police searched Baden-Clay’s home, his office, and seized his laptop.

The police investigation revealed hints that the couple’s family life was not as rosy as it looked from the outside.

Gerard had been having an affair with a colleague, and had not made much effort to hide it from mutual friends. His business was also struggling.

On June 13, Baden-Clay was arrested and charged with murder. Through his lawyers, he protested his innocence. His guilt or innocence will now be determined by the Queensland courts.

At a bail hearing last week, prosecutors alleged Baden-Clay was more than $1 million in debt and stood to gain $967,000 from his wife’s insurance policies and superannuation fund.

The court heard that he had told his mistress, a fellow real estate agent, that he would be separated from July 1; he was committed to her, but had to sort out his financial situation first.

Police also alleged he’d had three affairs since 2008.

In the days before Allison went missing, the court heard he made inquiries about her life insurance and Googled ‘taking the fifth’ (in the United States, the fifth amendment provides that no person be required to bear witness against themselves).

On the morning he reported Allison’s disappearance, prosecutors allege, Gerald Googled “self-incrimination” before he called police.

But in an affidavit Baden-Clay tendered to the court, he said he sent two early-morning text messages to his wife soon after he woke on the day she disappeared, asking where she was.

The first read: “Good morning! Hope you slept well? Where are you? None of the girls are up yet! Love G.” The second read; “All, getting concerned. Where are you? The app doesn’t say either. (two children) are up now. I’m dressed and about to make lunches. Please just text me or call! Love G”.

Lawyers for Baden-Clay have described the case against him as weak. They said there was no cause of death determined by the post mortem and no evidence Gerard left the house on the night she died.

Baden-Clay was refused bail. His trial could be another two years away due to delays in the Queensland legal system.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5075

Nora Ephron dies aged 71

Nora Ephron dies aged 71

Nora Ephron and Meryl Streep in 2010.

Iconic screenwriter and journalist Nora Ephron died yesterday aged 71.

Nora, who wrote When Harry met Sally and Sleepless in Seattle, passed away after a battle with pneumonia, brought on by acute myeloid leukaemia.

She was born in New York in 1941, the daughter of a Broadway playwright and a Hollywood screenwriter.

Nora started working as a journalist, writing for the New York Post and the New York Times before penning a series of novels, which she adapted for successful film scripts.

Despite her many talents, romantic comedies were where Nora would find widespread fame.

She wrote several blockbusters including You’ve Got Mail and Silkwood.

She wrote and directed her last film Julie and Julia in 2009, which starred her good friend and long-time collaborator Meryl Streep.

Nora was married three times. Her first — to writer Dan Greenburg — ended in divorce after nine years.

She married legendary Watergate journalist Carl Bernstein in 1976 and had her first child, son Jacob, the following year. She was pregnant with her second son Max when she found out Bernstein was having an affair with a mutual friend in 1976, ending their relationship.

Nora’s third marriage was far more successful. She wed screenwriter Nicholas Pileggi in 1987 and was still happily married to him when she died.

Video: Nora Ephron’s last interview with Kerri-Anne Kennerley in 2011

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5075

Christie Brinkley bans Peter Cook from speaking to her

Most of us swear we'll never talk to our ex again but former supermodel Christie Brinkley has made it official, signing a contract banning her former husband from speaking to her.
Christie Brinkley and Peter Cook

Most of us swear we’ll never talk to our ex again but former supermodel Christie Brinkley has made it official, signing a contract banning her former husband from speaking to her.

Christie, 58, divorced architect Peter Cook, 53, six years ago after her confessed to an affair with an 18-year-old girl, but they have been in a bitter custody dispute ever since.

They finally reached an agreement over the weekend, which included a strict ‘no verbal contact’ clause, which bans Christie and Peter from speaking again.

The former couple will hire a “parenting coordinator” to manage pick-ups, drop-offs and any other matters pertaining to their children Sailor, 14, and Jack, 17, whom Peter adopted when Christie’s previous marriage to Richard Taubman ended.

Christie was thrilled with the settlement, and particularly glad she would not have to communicate with Peter anymore.

“I finally won the right to establish boundaries with provisions such as an intermediary to deal with email bullying, verbal and emotional abuse,” she wrote on Facebook.

“It has been an odyssey of frustration as I have navigated the court system with one goal to find peace and protection for my family from the various forms of abuse at the hands of a narcissist.”

Peter also commented on the settlement, releasing a statement to the New York Post through his lawyer Jim Winkley branding Christie “frivolous” and claiming that her unreasonable behaviour had dragged out their custody battle.

The comments are the latest in a six-year public feud which has seen both parties repeatedly use the media to attack each other.

Peter has accused his former wife of “publicly castrating” him and “throwing her family under the bus” to promote her new Broadway musical, while Christie accused him of “intimidation” and carrying out a “smear campaign” against her.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5075

Liz Hurley: “I don’t want kids with Shane Warne”

Elizabeth Hurley and Shane Warne have four children between them so it's perhaps not surprising they aren't planning any more.
Shane Warne and Liz Hurley

Shane Warne and Liz Hurley

Elizabeth Hurley and Shane Warne have four children between them so it’s perhaps not surprising they aren’t planning any more.

Elizabeth, 47, and Shane, 42, are due to marry later this year but in an interview sure to disappoint gossip magazine editors the world over, Elizabeth has confirmed her child-bearing days are over.

“My biological clock is silent now,” the actress told A magazine. “So the marriage is just for us.”

Elizabeth also shared details about the couple’s upcoming nuptials. Unlike her lavish wedding to Indian businessman Arun Nayar in 2007, Liz wants this ceremony to be low-key and uncomplicated.

“I would like to marry Shane in a simple ceremony, with only a few friends,” she said. “A very simple do. But I don’t know if I will be satisfied.

“First of all, we must decide in which country to get married in, or better on what continent?”

Elizabeth has one son, Damian, 10, with billionaire Steve Bing. Shane has three kids, Brooke, 15, Jackson, 13, and Summer, 10, with his ex-wife Simone Callahan.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5075

Clever cat shows how to walk a human

Clever cat shows how to walk a human

Everyone has seen their fair share of cute and cuddly kitten videos, but there is something different about the stars of the latest viral kitten video, Shorty and Kodi.

Their owner Rob Moore, who lives in Toronto Canada, knew they had star appeal and many others soon agreed once he created a YouTube channel about the pair. Their latest video ‘How to walk your human’ (above) is going viral.

Moore says his cats, which were both adopted from a local animal shelter, have very interesting personalities.

“Kodi acts very much like a dog: short attention span, roughhousing, growling when we play tug of war,” Moore toldWoman’s Day.

“When he grabs the end of his [leash] he will never give up and just walks away from me, pulling me behind.

“Naturally, I filmed it but it was only when I reviewed the footage that I saw he was actually walking me like a human would walk a dog, so I went with that idea thinking of all the tips I’ve heard over the years about how to properly walk your dog.”

The video, which has had more than 160,000 views, isn’t the only viral that has brought the cats fame.

“Shorty had already found a bit of fame with her ‘Cat yoga’ video but having ‘How to walk your human’ go viral and being featured on so many great websites that I visit regularly has been awesome,” Moore said.

“Now so many people are getting to know Shorty and Kodi and are falling in love with them. I guess I kind of feel like a proud parent.”

Moore says he continues to post the videos because so many people get so much joy out of his pets. He also hopes that it encourages people to adopt animals from their local shelters.

“Shorty and Kodi’s unique personalities inspire the videos, but also the feedback from their viewers who come to our channel wanting a smile or a laugh,” he said.

“When Shorty was a kitten, people nicknamed her ‘The Antidepressant Kitty’ because they said her videos made them feel better, even gave them something to look forward to.

“So, aside from just wanting to share the quirks of my cats with the YouTube world, I really wanted to keep reaching those people who needed a laugh and so it became a fun challenge to try and present Shorty, and then Kodi, in a way that first made me laugh and then hopefully others as well.”

Do you have a talented pet? Tell us about it in the comments box below.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5075

Kate must curtsey to Beatrice and Eugenie

Kate must curtsey to Beatrice and Eugenie

Catherine, Princess Beatrice and the Countess of Wessex curtseying to the Queen.

The Duchess of Cambridge will one day be queen but she will still have to curtsey to Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie.

Queen Elizabeth II has updated the royal Order of Precedence — which dictates the status of every member of the royal family — to clarify Catherine’s position.

The rules make clear whom Catherine must curtsey to, and who will have to curtsey or bow to her.

In pictures: Kate Middleton – Queen in training

If Catherine is without her husband Prince William, she must curtsey to all “blood princesses” including Beatrice, Eugenie, Princess Anne and the Queen’s cousin Princess Alexandra.

But if William is present, Catherine curtseys only to Prince Charles, Camilla (only if Charles is present), Prince Philip and the Queen.

The Order of Precedence also determines the order in which royals arrive at official engagements.

In pictures: Camilla and Sophie succumb to the Kate Effect

It was last updated after Charles’s wedding to Camilla in 2005 and is taken very seriously by the royal family, who bow and curtsey to each other in public and in private.

This most recent update does not change anything practically, merely clarifying Catherine’s official position. She was privately schooled in whom to curtsey to shortly before her marriage and has been obeying the protocol ever since.

Your say: Do you think bowing and curtseying is old-fashioned and out-dated or an important part of the British monarchy?

Video: What next for the royal family?

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5075

I fantasize about another man

I fantasize about another man

Image: Thinkstock, posed by models

Two years ago I was at a conference for work. I had just started my job and was still trying to get my head around things with no idea what I was meant to be doing. I sat down at an empty table and stared at the program in front of me, wondering how I was going to survive the next couple of days without looking like a complete idiot. I felt the chair next to me move and turned to look up at the person who was going to sit next to me.

To my surprise and delight, it was a very good looking young man. He smiled at me and told me his name was Bryan. I smiled back and introduced myself. From that moment on, Bryan and I got along famously. We chatted non-stop in the breaks and sat next to each other during the conference dinners.

On the last night of the conference, we both drank a little too much an he decided to escort me back to my motel. On the way there, as we walked through the park, I stopped and looked at him. Without warning, he leant down and kissed me.

That kiss was amazing. It sent goose bumps up and down my spine. We ended up back at my motel, where we spent the night. The next day we said our goodbyes and promised to keep in touch. Neither of us was ready for a relationship and besides we lived in different countries. As promised, we kept in touch via email and Facebook, but as time passed, we went from several emails a day to one or two a month.

About four months later, I met Liam. He was tall, dark and handsome, and we seemed to click. We had heaps in common and were extremely attracted to each other. Three months later we decided to give things a go and have a relationship.

As the months passed, Liam and I fell more and more in love and though our jobs took us all over the country, we only had eyes for each other. We started talking long term about buying a house, marriage and children. I had never been so happy with someone. Almost 18 months after we started our relationship, the conference I had been at two years earlier rolled around again and I was set to attend.

I was so excited to be going back. I was now confident and successful in my role and was ready to show off how much I had improved. I hopped on my international flight ready to take on the world. I got dressed for the welcome mixer and smiled as I left. I looked great and felt confident. I walked into the room and started to mingle, enjoying catching up with people I knew and meeting others for the first time.

I walked over to the bar to get a new glass of wine and as I looked up my eyes met a pair of deep, dark eyes looking straight at me … it was Bryan. I had not even thought about the possibility of him being there. As I looked into his eyes and made my way over to him, my mind was going crazy. Flashbacks were spinning through my mind and my heart rate sped up.

As I hugged him in greeting, shivers raced up my spine. He was better looking than I remembered and his smile had my legs going weak. Once again, we spent the conference talking and catching up. It was so easy to fall into how it had been two years ago. If we were in other groups, he would often catch my eye and wink or smile at me. Every time our legs or arms touched I would get goose bumps, and I wanted him to grab me and kiss me all over again.

In my mind, I knew that if he made a move I would not be able to resist. At the end of the conference we said our goodbyes and our farewell hug lingered a bit longer than perhaps it should have. I was sad and happy at the same time. I wanted him so badly my body ached for it, but I had stayed true to the man I loved.

Liam met me when I hopped off my flight and as I embraced him then, and later on when we made love, my mind was still full of Bryan. I pictured that it was him I was with. Each night I go to sleep dreaming of what it would be like if Bryan were in Liam’s place, and each morning I wake up to once again see that it is never going to happen.

Each day I fall in love with Liam all over again. But part of me will always wonder if it would have worked with Bryan. I dread and look forward to the day we are once again in the same room.

Your say: Have you had a similar experience? Share your stories and thoughts below.

Related stories


Advertisement