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Fashion Before Plus-Size: Bodies, Bias, and the Birth of an Industry

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In 2022, it was reported that plus-sizes accounted for nearly twenty percent of all women's apparel sales in the United States and was one of the industry's few growth sectors. For many, this news seemed to herald a remarkably inclusive turn for an industry that long bartered in exclusivity. Yet the recent success of plus-size fashion obscures a rather complicated history–one that can be traced back over a century, and which illuminates the fraught relationship between fashion, fat, and weight bias in American culture.

Although many regard fat as a malady of the present, in the early twentieth century it was estimated that more than one-third of American women classified as “overweight.” While modern weight bias had yet to fully cement itself in the American imaginary, the limitations of mass garment manufacturing coupled with the ascendent slender beauty ideal had already relegated larger women to fashion's peripheries. By 1915, however, fashion forecasters predicted that so-called “stoutwear” was well positioned to become one of the most lucrative subsectors of the burgeoning ready-to-wear trade. In the years that followed, stoutwear manufacturers set out to create more space for the fat woman in fashion but, in doing so, revealed an ancillary that of how to design fat out of existence altogether.

Fashion Before Plus-Size considers what came “before” plus-size fashion while also shedding new light on the ways that the fashion industry not only perpetuates but produces weight bias. By situating stoutwear at the confluence of mass manufacturing, beauty ideals, standardized sizing, health discourse, and consumer culture, this book exposes the flawed foundations upon which the contemporary plus-size fashion industry has been built.

216 pages, Hardcover

Published July 13, 2023

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Lauren Downing Peters

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Profile Image for Laura Walmsley.
6 reviews
January 15, 2026
Based on someone’s PhD, book about the plus sized fashion industry in the 1920’s and 30’s in America. Very useful and worthwhile book to read from an informative point of view. However lots of examples of advertisers and fashion journalists opinions of plus size women of the period, at no point does it include any testimony from said women in their own words. 3 ‘case studies’ which are extremely unrepresentative of normal women and one of which turns out to be fictitious anyway (why include this?) Author is herself thin and not at all plus sized. You could kind of tell this from the book and the lack of any actual plus sized women’s voices.
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