Lifestyle questions and answers

Ask a question on any topic and get answers from real people on Yahoo! Canada Answers

Germany's largest women's magazine to ditch professional models in favour of real women

By Melissa Eddy, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BERLIN, Germany - Germany's most popular women's magazine announced Monday that it is banning professional models from its pages in favour of "real women" in an attempt to combat an unhealthy standard of rail-thin beauty that it says has isolated its readers.

The editor-in-chief of Germany's bimonthly Brigitte told reporters that, starting next year, the magazine will feature a mix of prominent women and regular readers in photo spreads for everything from beauty to fashion to fitness.

Andreas Lebert said the move is a response to readers increasingly saying that they are tired of seeing "protruding bones" from models who weigh far less than the average woman.

"We will show women who have an identity - the 18-year-old student, the head of the board, the musician, the football player," Andreas Leberts said in Hamburg, where the magazine, published by Gruner+Jahr, is based.

Fashion centres around the world have begun trying in recent years to combat the size 0 look that has come to dominate the fashion industry, contributing, some experts say, to eating disorders and poor body image.

In 2004, the Dove beauty products company launched its own "Campaign for Real Beauty" that included print and billboard ads showing "real women," of all shapes and sizes, posing in their underwear.

In 2007, the U.S. Council of Fashion of Designers of America issued voluntary guidelines to curb the use of overly thin models.

Fashion officials in Madrid set a minimum body-mass index, and those in Milan tightened restrictions. Efforts gained urgency after 21-year-old Brazilian model Ana Carolina Reston died of anorexia in November 2006, weighing 88 pounds (40 kilos).

On its Web site, Brigitte announced to readers that "A New Epoch has Begun" and women to submit a portrait and full-body photos of themselves to considered for a photo shoot.

"We will pay the same fee as we would for professional models," Lebert said, adding that the magazine views the move as an investment.

Lebert said his magazine's move "should not be understood as a declaration of war on the modeling profession."

"We are not going to become a magazine for plus-sizes," he said.

Brigitte has suffered a steady drop in readers over the past 20 years but, with more than 719,000 copies sold per issue, it remains Germany's most-read women's magazine.

Louisa von Minckwitz, who owns the German-based Louisa Models agency, told The Associated Press she believed the ban on models was a marketing gag that would not last for long.

"Women want to see clothes on a beautiful, esthetically pleasing person," von Minckwitz said.

-

Associated Press Writer Zacharias Zacharakis contributed from Hamburg.

-

On the Web:

German-language site: www.brigitte.de

Average (6 Ratings)4.33 out of 5 stars

4 Comments

  • 1. Posted by Anna M on Thu, Oct 15, 2009

    I think this new movement into reality is long overdue. All women of different sizes are beautiful. I enjoy seeing healthy sized women in stylish clothing. I do not think its beautiful seeing a stick figure such as a size 0-2 in fashionable clothes. Its like seeing it on a coat rack. Looks terrible.

    Report Abuse
  • 2. Posted by Anna M on Thu, Oct 15, 2009

    I think this new movement into reality is long overdue. All women of different sizes are beautiful. I enjoy seeing healthy sized women in stylish clothing. I do not think its beautiful seeing a stick figure such as a size 0-2 in fashionable clothes. Its like seeing it on a coat rack. Looks terrible.

    Report Abuse
  • 3. Posted by Abby on Tue, Oct 13, 2009

    I agree with Artie ! It is about time that we see real women on the cover of magasines. I mean models are people too but it's only a very SMALL pourcentage of women who can actualy be that thin and tall.

    Report Abuse
  • 4. Posted by Artie on Mon, Oct 12, 2009

    its about time! i am so sick and tired of society believing and thinking that we all have to be railroaded into being skinny. its time to see that real women wear nice clothes and that they don't have be a size 2! its abt personality and attitude not how boney ones body is!

    Report Abuse

LEAVE YOUR COMMENT
character(s) remaining

You must sign in to leave a comment

TODAY ON YAHOO!

Top stories

Another Montreal café firebombed
CBC - A Molotov cocktail was thrown into a Montreal café early Tuesday morning, the latest in a...

Business

Japanese exports post smallest drop in a year as global stimulus measures buoy demand
The Canadian Press - TOKYO - Japanese exports in October fell by the smallest amount in a year,...

Odd News

US church robber leaves note on wall: 'Sorry but I'm poor'; still makes off with loot
The Canadian Press - ELLENWOOD, Ga. - Someone made off with loot from a church but also left...