How young is too young for the fashion industry?
That’s the question that’s being asked since a string of controversies involving underage models ignited the debate over the sexualisation of young girls in the fashion industry.
Marc Jacobs continues to cast teen models in his runway shows, Chanel is using Ondria Hardin, 15, as the face of their brand, Vogue reneged on their pledge not to use underage models in the December issue of Vogue Japan using 14-year-old Thairine Garcia in an editorial spread. And you may also remember the outcry over the use of 10-year-old Thylane Loubry Blondeau in a provocative shoot for Vogue.
Ondria , Thairine, Thylane and their contemporaries, Monika, Anais and Kaia are the fashion industry’s ‘army of children,’ a term coined by designer Michael Kors to describe models younger than 16 who the fashion industry are holding up as the ‘next big thing.’
Nineties model Yasmin Le Bon recently weighed in on the underage model debate, telling British Vogue the reason designers use children has little to do with aesthetics and more to do with being cheap.
“I think that it is wrong that young girls are now opening shows. It’s hyped up as a discovery of the next big thing, but actually the designers are penny-pinching. … These young girls don’t get paid very much, and they don’t have the experience or the confidence to demand to be treated any differently by the industry.”
And the pressure to conform to the modelling industry’s thin ideals is even worse when it’s directed at kids.
“We were slim [when I began modelling], but there was a bit more on us, and we were older,” she says. “This kind of practice doesn’t make good for business,” Le Bon says.