From what I’ve known most of my life, the trend emphasized a petite, model type look, but now it seems trendier to want to be curvier. When and why did this shift start?


22 comments
  1. It’s a return to normal (depending on what you mean by “curvy”).  The emaciated boyish look was purely a product of the advertising industry.

  2. Trends shift over time. Look at clothing. I’m 42. When my grandpa was young, baggy clothes were the in thing. Zoot suits were the trend.

    Then, when my parents were young, tight fitting clothes were the trend. 

    When I was young, we were back to baggy. 

    Then, the generation behind me wore skinny jeans. 

    Now, jnco are coming back. 

    All trends are like this. There are only so many options to choose from. At some point, the zeitgeist wants something different. 

  3. It’s gotten kinda crazy, a few super popular models that are clearly just overweight. It’s like any trend though, the pendulum will (and is already, they jumped the shark with these crazy BBLs) swing back. Hopefully it doesn’t go back to the unhealthy thin model looks of the 90s, there is a middle ground.

  4. Always?

    In the 20s it was “child birthing hips”. In the 50s it continued with playboy. Only time I can think it wasn’t a thing was when”Brittney spear era” where it was low rise jeans.

  5. Probably around the turn of the 2010s. Social media allowed body positivity as an idea to spread and you started seeing curvier actresses in more visible roles where being curvy (aka fat back then) wasn’t a joke at their expense (Christina Hendricks, Kat Dennings, etc) combined with curvier pop stars (Beyonce, Rihanna, Nicki Minaj, Adele)

  6. Always. Being skinny was a deviation from the norm. l would prefer a world where there are a plethora of body types to fawn over.

  7. I don’t know but the white women dominate every glute workout at my gym. There are girls putting up more plates on the hip thrust than I could dream of doing. 

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