Register for E-mail alerts. Comment on articles. Sign up today, it's easy.
Close
The Washington Times Online Edition

Spain to standardize women’s clothing sizes

MADRID (AP) — Spain’s government has reached an agreement with fashion designers, including the owner of the Zara chain, to standardize women’s clothing sizes with the aim of promoting a healthier image.

Designers such as Cortefiel, Mango, El Corte Ingles and Inditex, which owns Zara, agreed to take part in the program, which was announced Tuesday.

The program, designed by the Health Ministry, will also prevent those companies from using window displays featuring clothes smaller than a European size 38 (10 in Britain, 8 in the United States). They will have five years to phase in the change.

“It is not reasonable for a modern and advanced society to establish stereotypes of beauty that are far removed from the social reality of a community. It is everyone’s commitment that beauty and health go hand in hand,” Health Minister Elena Salgado said at a signing ceremony Tuesday.

The agreement follows last year’s unprecedented decision by Spain’s main fashion show, Madrid’s Pasarela Cibeles, to ban some models from the catwalk on grounds they were too thin, saying this look encouraged eating disorders among young people.

The Health Ministry’s program aims to end a situation in which a woman who buys a size 40 dress from one designer may not fit in a size 40 garment from another designer. The ministry said the differences sometimes lead women to feel compelled to lose weight.

As part of the effort to standardize sizes, the ministry plans to measure 8,500 Spanish girls and women between the ages of 12 and 70 to determine the true shapes of Spanish women’s bodies.

Designers should be encouraged to “promote a healthy physical image that conforms with the reality of the Spanish population,” the ministry said in a statement.

The agreement also stipulates that European size 46 no longer be specifically labeled as a larger size.

Comments
blog comments powered by Disqus
You Might Also Like
  • Rep. Ron Paul

    Republicans see need to give Paul a voice

    By Seth McLaughlin - The Washington Times

  • In Case You Missed It
    Happening Now

          Independent voices from the TWT Communities

          From Naïve to Native in Madrid

          Join along as a George Washington University student immerses himself into Madrid’s food, arts, cultural and social life as he quests for total Spanish enculturation.

          LifeCycles

          The “Silver Tsunami” created by aging Baby Boomers is hitting America. Let’s explore how we adjust to it, enjoy it and defy negative expectations about age.

          Stimulus That!

          Global economy, the civilizing power of markets and public morals.

          Great Political Debate

          Communities writers, and sometimes readers, debte the political, economic and social issues of the day.