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Adios! Spain bans skinny mannequins in stores
March 13, 2007
MADRID, Spain - Vanesa Lopez looked at the mannequin in
the store window and burst out laughing. It was mostly leg,
impossibly long and thin, with shorts hugging a tiny waist and a
frilly top on delicate shoulders.
“That’s out of my league,” said Lopez, a 30-year-old interior
decorator with a medium build. “You see it and say, ‘Wow, I’d
like to look like that.”’
Such skeletal fashion dummies, symbols of a culture blamed for
fueling a preoccupation with weight, are now doomed in Spain
under a groundbreaking accord between the Health Ministry and
major retailers like Zara and Mango.
Also targeted for extinction is the dilemma of a size fitting
just right in one store but being too tight at another — just
one more way to make a woman feel fat.
The program is aimed at changing the perception that
super-skinny women are fashionable — an image some believe
contributes to eating disorders. Madrid and Milan banned
ultra-thin models from their fashion week runways late last
year, and this year the Council of Fashion Designers of America
announced guidelines designed to help models eat and live more
healthfully.
Spain takes aim
The offensive might seem odd coming from Spain, a nation that to
the casual eye is neither fat nor thin, nor readily associated
with anorexia, bulimia or obesity. The country prides itself on
a Mediterranean diet rich in fruit, vegetables and heart-healthy
foods like olive oil and fish.
But just as Spain has quickly caught up with its European
neighbors economically and culturally in the generation since it
shed a right-wing dictatorship in the late 1970s, so has it
matched them in the more dangerous trappings of an affluent,
go-go consumer society.
And today’s Socialist government, vigorously assertive on a bevy
of social issues ranging from gay marriage to gender violence,
is now taking aim at the fashion world as a source of risky
thought and behavior.
“We are aiming for a model of healthy beauty,” said Angeles
Heras, director of consumer affairs at the Health Ministry.
“There is a lot pressure, not just from the fashion world but
society in general, for women to seek models of beauty that are
unreal and even unhealthy.”
Nothing smaller than a size 6
So two major changes, announced in January, are in the works:
Stores run by four big names will start replacing window-display
mannequins so that none is smaller than size 38 (size 6 in the
U.S.). And designers will standardize women’s apparel so a given
size will fit the same way no matter who sells it.
To get a better idea of the shapes of Spanish women’s bodies,
the government is employing some heavy technology. Using
laser-fitted booths that can take 130 measurements of a body in
30 seconds, the Health Ministry is fanning out across the
country to assess the sizes of Spanish women.
The program will study 8,500 women ages 12 to 70, and pass the
data onto clothing designers who account for 80 percent of the
production in the Spanish fashion industry. The manufacturers’
garments will then reflect the dimensions of real women, not
catwalk waifs.
The standardization is to be phased in after the study is
completed this year.
Other designers have asked to join the program, and Italy sent a
letter asking about it, Heras said. “It seems we are pioneers,”
she said.
Growing economy, growing eating disorders
An estimated one in five Spanish women ages 13 to 22 suffer from
an eating disorder, placing Spain on par with its European
neighbors, said Gonzalo Morande, a physician who runs the eating
disorders department at Madrid’s Nino Jesus Hospital.
Such conditions became prevalent about 20 years ago elsewhere in
Europe. Spain got a later start, but caught up quickly, Morande
said.
“One of the peculiar things about Spain is that when processes
happen, they happen very quickly,” he said. Morande welcomed the
standardization of women’s clothing sizes, saying Spanish women
are taller and bigger than they were a generation ago because of
changes in eating habits.
But Enrique Berbel, a psychologist who also works with eating
disorder patients, said fashion and the beautiful people of pop
culture are only part of the problem in Spain. Another major
factor that is not being addressed is Spain’s newfound wealth,
he said.
He said the mechanism works like this: The economy — poor under
past dictatorship but now the world’s eighth largest — has
spawned a consumption-crazed society that creates artificial
needs and fuels dissatisfaction.
Teenagers have cell phones but they want BMWs. And they often
take out their frustrations on themselves.
“‘I can’t get the things I want. I can’t lead the lifestyle I
want. I can’t be like I want, but I can control my body.’ There
are people who think this way,” Berbel said.
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